Tuesday, July 31, 2007
they're having some rad screenings up there today
just stooges to our senses
In a recent experiment, psychologists at Yale altered people’s judgments of a stranger by handing them a cup of coffee.
The study participants, college students, had no idea that their social instincts were being deliberately manipulated. On the way to the laboratory, they had bumped into a laboratory assistant, who was holding textbooks, a clipboard, papers and a cup of hot or iced coffee — and asked for a hand with the cup.
That was all it took: The students who held a cup of iced coffee rated a hypothetical person they later read about as being much colder, less social and more selfish than did their fellow students, who had momentarily held a cup of hot java.
Monday, July 30, 2007
and I have trouble with a pencil

Each year since 1993 the farmers of the Japanese town of Inakadate have been creating massive images with rice by growing a purple and yellow-leafed kodaimai rice alongside the local green-leafed tsugaru-roman rice.
Sunday, July 29, 2007
sunday short stack

"In all affairs it's a healthy thing now and then to hang a question mark on the things you have long taken for granted." - Bertrand Russell
- That's Dr. Brian May to you.
- Maybe Dr. May has something to say about the UFOs over England.
- Planet Hiltron shows us what celebrities would look like if they lived in Nebraska and worked in the accounting department of the local paper mill.
- French women don't get fat because they choose not to have kids.
- Ovid in Ovid, Colorado
- That's it. I'm the victim of a scam.
- Our distant cousin has won the Olaudah Equiano Prize for Fiction.
- The home of hip hop gets historic landmark status.
- The Top 10 Weirdest and Funniest Japanese Condoms
- Damn. Now what's my excuse?
- If you could be any animal, what would you be?
Friday, July 27, 2007
Thursday, July 26, 2007
ville spontanee

Wednesday, July 25, 2007
another sign of the apocalypse
...to the East is Ridgewood, in Queens, which is apparently where all the artists priced out of Bushwick have been moving.
What the hell is going on over there??
Tuesday, July 24, 2007
is that my belt?
Sunday, July 22, 2007
theresa duncan (1966-2007)

She seemed to live this charmed, glamorous, sensual life, but now she's dead by her own hand and her partner of 12 years, artist Jeremy Blake, is missing and presumed dead. There is so very little that makes life less difficult.
Friday, July 20, 2007
strip away the audible
Some have been better than others, a few have been excellent, but none have truly convinced. And here's why:
a) Writing about music is hard enough at the best of times; try writing about music that doesn't exist. The basic inescapable flaw in every rock novel is the fact that the reader can't hear the music and thus struggles to identify with the artist. Strip away any audible, self-evident sign of talent - ie the songs - and most rock stars are simply posturing bores. Hardly the stuff of great fiction.
b) Good novelists have a tendency to get sloppy when they write about popular music - it's an exercise in cultural slumming that almost inevitably lends itself to unoriginal plots and indulgent writing. From their names on down - Ormus Cana? Bucky Wunderlick?! - the characters rarely ring true, apparently hell-bent on playing out the author's own fantasies rather than attempting to illuminate what this great rock and roll circus actually means.
c) Rock novels are pitched at an enormously demanding readership. If the atmosphere and language isn't spot on, we turn off. If we don't share the musical tastes of the writer, we struggle to engage: think of Iain Banks' patently awful prog rock band Frozen Gold in Espedair Street. We're so acutely aware of the tiniest rituals of a gig or the peculiarly nuanced language deployed by musicians that an author has to avoid a minefield of cliche while still creating something familiar enough to convince - and that's a tough tightrope to walk.
Thursday, July 19, 2007
tell us how you really feel
one little fish changed him
awaiting fate
Wednesday, July 18, 2007
Tuesday, July 17, 2007
shopping cart pusher or maybe someone groovy
In a stunning twist, my old 3rd Avenue home address in Gowanus also scored a 77, but my Gramercy Park work address scored an impressive 98! My current work address on the outskirts of downtown scored an 80, so clearly the index does not factor in whether you'd actually be comfortable walking in that neighborhood.
Monday, July 16, 2007
hey, it's glass!

Friday, July 13, 2007
just stash 'em in the leg cupboard
Thursday, July 12, 2007
I might welcome the sabre-tooth tiger
there is a chance the human will expect the zombie
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
manners: the final and perfect flower of noble character

Monday, July 09, 2007
52 books in 52 weeks

This is an odd novel that plays much with your mind and little with your heart. It's full of imagination and atmosphere and suspense, but I never particularly cared about the narrator.

Fantastic! Jones reminds me of Alice Munro in his depth and pacing. I wish there were more published writers describing the African-American experience with such literary flair and mastery.

I missed the characters in this book immediately upon finishing it. Yet more proof that Lionel Shriver tells a great story. I've said it before and I'll say it again: Read We Need to Talk About Kevin.
Sunday, July 08, 2007
sunday short stack

"A computer lets you make more mistakes faster than any invention in human history - with the possible exceptions of handguns and tequila." - Mitch Ratcliffe
- More "geek quotes" like the one above can be found here.
- Also from Neatorama, a clip of a four-year-old calling 911 with a math emergency.
- Virginia Heffernan of the New York Times believes celebrity reality shows pick up where Fitzgerald left off. I would so watch Hey Zelda.
- Metroblogging LA looks at how bloggers have taken on the City Council in the aftermath of the Griffith Park fire.
- The Proust Archive looks at one of my favorite topics: apocalypse.
- Why didn't folks try harder to save Coney Island?
- It's been too long since I've posted anything about David Mitchell.
- 10 Mind-Boggling Psychiatric Treatments
- OnBeing is a project based on the simple notion that we should get to know one another a little better.
- Underwater tigers!
Friday, July 06, 2007
cuts like a knife
Thursday, July 05, 2007
complete with climax

Until I observed last night’s series of fireworks displays across the East River, I had not encountered political fireworks in the literal sense. It seems that the Jersey authorities were extremely pissed off after Battery Park was closed to the public. So from Jersey’s side of the Hudson, the Jersey boys proceeded to offer as momentous a show as public money could offer — minutes before the Macy’s display had begun. Their fireworks, which declared with every burst that Jersey was as much a part of the July 4th celebrations as the big boys, were designed to be seen across a considerable expanse of water. At first, the assembled throngs on the Brooklyn Heights Promenade appreciated this. And I had to smile and empathize over the Jersey effrontery. Yes, it was a case of flagrant dick wars. But it was the kind of symbolic penis measurement that reminds everyone that there’s more to life than deep pockets. All of us ducked beneath umbrellas, buffeting a downpour that lifted shortly before Macy’s 9:20 PM start time. But the minute that Macy’s began launching jellyfish low-risers and smiley-shaped explosives into the sky, the crowd quickly turned on these apparent Jersey upstarts, becoming deeply vociferous about how “we” — meaning New York — had showed the folks in Jersey. Yet, “we” entailed Brooklyn and Queens for the most part. There was something deeply allegorical about all of this: private money vs. public money, proletariat vs. bourgeoisie, New York vs. New Jersey. And I soon began to understand that East Coast provincial lines were more ridiculous than I ever imagined. But it was still a good show. And I’m not just referring to the fireworks.
*(I just remembered how my cousins, my brother, and I were terrified by a scrawled note in my aunt and uncle's basement that was there when they bought the house: "Years have passed since the Fourth." Cue dramatic organ music.)
Tuesday, July 03, 2007
that isn't writing - it's typing
In Plato's famous dialogue, Socrates argues that the eponymous Ion and his fellow rhapsodes (the slam artists of Ancient Greece) are possessed by the gods whenever they tread the boards. According to this tradition, the artist, in the throes of creation, is under the influence -- be it of the Muses, drugs, alcohol, a dream vision or some other variant of divine inspiration. Ionic Man does not speak: he is spoken through (or played upon like Coleridge's Aeolian harp), hence the cult of "spontaneous prose" in its various guises. The work of art comes as easily as leaves to a tree, appearing fully-formed in a blinding flash of inspiration or in an accretive, free-associative manner as if under dictation. In both cases, logorrhoea beckons.
The Surrealists' experiments with automatic writing belong to this school. So do the numerous penis-extension tall tales of binge typing. A driven Kerouac composed On the Road in a three-week, benzedrine-fuelled session after fashioning a scroll manuscript which allowed the all-important free flow of words to go unimpeded. Capote's famous quip - "That isn't writing; it's typing" - unwittingly captured the histrionic quality of Kerouac's feat. This is action writing that transforms a sedate, sedentary, haemorrhoid-inducing activity into a heroic performance.
Another prime instance of Ionic braggadocio is the legend according to which Georges Simenon once locked himself in a glass cage to toss off a novel in three days and three nights while spectators gawked. This planned publicity stunt never actually occurred, but it may well have inspired Will Self who, back in 2000, wrote a novella in a London art gallery during a two-week residency: the words were projected live on to a plasma screen behind the desk where he sat. These experiments, and others like National Novel Writing Month, are all interesting enough, but perhaps the time has come to ditch literary hothousing in favour of the Platonics' "precious little" aesthetics.
Monday, July 02, 2007
monday! short stack

"The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not 'Eureka!' (I found it!) but 'That's funny ...'" - Isaac Asimov
In a crazy turn of events, the Sunday Short Stack appears here on a Monday. What could be next?
- A coffee table that transforms into a couch?
- A Kwik-E-Mart come to life in Burbank?
- A house made entirely of mosaic tiles?
- A reality TV version of Ugly Betty?
- A magic Portuguese barn full of classic sports cars?
- Lying babies?
- A funny Woody Allen?
- An indie rock cookbook?
- The Supreme Court rules in favor of segregation?