Monday


2
Jul 12

I’m reading and thinking, so …

I am glad there are people like this in the world. The world needs people who find art in essentially simple engineering. There’s a place for people who find conversations in circles. I’m just glad I’m not that person.

Wheels get me there. Safely. Comfortably. Just get me there.

It makes you wonder how the brain perceives art. Why do you see it farther down this chain of events and activities than the next person? There’s a talent and an art to growing things. There’s a great spirit involved in planting a seed and nurturing what comes next. A different person takes that freshly grown potato and thinks: french fries. Now there’s a culinary art I can salt and get behind.

You can think of any analogy you like and make it apply here. I’ll stick with a simplified explanation. Anything you do with joy can be art — I made pizzas in high school, and that wasn’t art, but there was a guy there who did it with flair. When it becomes rote, then you’ve done it too long. I like to watch the guys at Mellow Mushroom spin out the pretzels. To them this is a crank of wrist and a bend of the elbow, a few hundred times a night. Don’t spill it and don’t back up the kitchen. Just get it there safely and comfortably.

I’m not a very good cyclist — have you heard? — but I do try and make sure there’s a smile on my face. Otherwise, what is the point? You get in the upper 20s and there’s so much wind it always sounds like there’s a car behind you, you better look the part because, eventually, that will be a car and not wind noise. A truck turned right in front of me the other day, almost hitting me, and then behaved rather stupidly in front of me for some time. It is unnerving, but you must remember to smile. That guy could be having a really bad day. There could be a terrifying spider in his lap as far as I know. Also his truck weighs more than my bike, and he cares not for the philosophical or ontological designs behind the wheels’ origin.

Someone will write to say that the absence of appreciation is a lack of depth of thought. True. Usually I’m more concerned with breathing and lactic acid in my legs. And I’ve seen wheels my entire life. Perhaps if I’d been around at the beginning for those first stone wheels I would have made drawings on my wall about them.

We’d talk about it later, but I’d act casually about the wonders of what I’d seen and preserved in plant dye.

“Grog! Look! I have portrayed Grimmel’s wheel. See how it slides down the hill? He should try it on the skinny side. But his flipping regimen is doing wonders for his core.”

At what point, really, do you think people began to look at the wheel as more than a simple tool that made chores remarkably easier? The Renaissance? The Bronze Age? The first kid that had a wheeled toy? Wikipedia says that was perhaps around 1500 BC and — I’m guess from the citation here — in Mexico. Imagine that, a kid who looks at what someone carved him and comes to the realization that he has, as a toy, what someone in the village doesn’t have as a tool.

But he didn’t write sonnets about it.

And now, 100 guitar riffs we should beam to outer space on a universal disc of greetings along with our periodic chart and anatomical cliff notes. Here is something of a history of rock ‘n’ roll, without the obligatory guitar faces:

That really needs Joe Satriani and Alex Lifeson, but you can’t have everything. Artists.


25
Jun 12

Fore!

Golfers, even woeful hacks like me, should never let cobwebs grow on their golf bag. And yet they have. We haven’t played since we moved into the new house, so at least two years. And maybe closer to three. Who can say?

But we have the opportunity next month to play on a course of some fabled significance and we are now working under the impression that a few short rounds between now and then at the local municipal course will improve our game to simply galling.

So we asked a friend of ours — when he met each of us separately, introduced himself by asking if we golfed — to walk nine with us today. He’s probably one of the better duffers in town and, maybe, it’ll rub off on us.

Rob

You can pay for golf lessons, but simple instructions go just as far for people like me — the guy who can hit most every stick in his bag, just never on command. I noticed … come to think of it … that he spent more time coaching The Yankee than he did with me. But I did get some nice putting advice. Nicklaus knows I need it.

Now The Yankee …

Rob

We’ll, she’s just naturally athletic. Good at everything. Check her out on the seventh hole:


18
Jun 12

I have nothing for this lovely Monday

Just reading and trying to write today. Nothing exciting happening on my end whatsoever. How’s your Monday? Grand I hope. We all hope that for one another’s Monday, right? Do we worry about such a thing by Friday? We all have a Monday, but I bet we tend to hold Friday afternoon as our own. And we’re not too concerned about your Saturday prospects either. Unless we need your help moving or something. Otherwise we’re too busy thinking of our own Saturday at the pool or the beach or park or wherever the weekend is taking place.

But Mondays, oh we find we can all relate to that.

The misery of Mondays is overrated to me, but I don’t doubt others experience the phenomenon. Because, one day, I might need a little sypathy about that. We’re desperate to know you can relate to ours.

Some stuff I’ve read today: Jeff Jarvis on Disrupting journalism education, too:

Yes, there will still be classes in writing, editing, and reporting — boot camp with beats ramping up to specialization and expertise — and yes, as I said above, there should still be classes and seminars in law, ethics, theory, and judgment. I’m not trying to blow everything up, not yet. I’m trying to find more ways to teach more and make it fit students’ outcomes better. If we make the teaching of tools and use practical experience better, I wonder whether we’ll be able to devote more resources to more study.

What I’m also trying to do is imagine scaling journalism education so that much, or most, of it could be taught to some — no, to many more — people online, including not just undergrad and graduate students but also professionals who obviously need to learn new skills as their industry convulses around them. I want to have the means to bring training in journalism, media skills, and business to the entrepreneurs and hyperlocal, hyperinterest journalists — and technologists — I continue to hope will populate a growing news ecosystem.

Howard Finberg on Journalism education cannot teach its way to the future:

The future of journalism education will be a very different and difficult future, a future that is full of innovation and creative disruption. And, I believe, we will see an evolution and uncoupling between the value of a journalism education and a journalism degree.

When we think about the future, there’s not a single future. The future for a 20-year-old is clearly very different than the future of a 60-year-old. Each will bring a very different perspective.

The future of journalism education is linked to the future of journalism itself. Each is caught within the other’s vortex, both spinning within today’s turmoil of change.

I find I’ve been thinking and talking along these lines for a good while now. Fine piece, though.

A Samford colleague wrote an open letter to the TSA, and the people said “Amen”:

The TSA should not be streamlined. Administrators should not “review screening procedures.” Screeners don’t need additional training. The TSA doesn’t need to be tweaked. It didn’t “go too far” in these specific instances. Its very existence goes too far. The TSA never should have been created in the first place, and it should be abolished now. Immediately. Without hesitation.

The TSA’s existence is an assault on American liberty and simple human dignity, as anyone who has had his or her genitals touched during an “enhanced pat-down” can tell you. Some still say we should be willing to trade off a little bit of liberty in order to get security, but this is a false trade-off. The TSA does not provide security. It provides what security expert Bruce Schneier calls “security theater.” The TSA only exists in order to give people the illusion of safety. Someone in an airport somewhere in the U.S. is being subjected to an unreasonable search by a gloved TSA screener right this minute. The cruel irony is that he or she is being stripped of liberty and dignity and is being made no safer for it.

As security experts John Mueller and Mark Stewart have estimated, the entire Homeland Security Department infrastructure fails on cost-benefit grounds. In order to justify the costs, Homeland Security would have to stop about four and a half attacks on the scale of the failed 2010 Times Square bombing every day.

WSB Radio, the famed White Columns of Atlanta, are doing something really cool with their Facebook page. Like radio or history or both? Scroll to the bottom, starting in 1922, and work your way up.

So, really, how is your Monday?


11
Jun 12

About Saturday night (and tonight, too)

Talked about the Saturday night shooting on the radio this morning. You can hear that here. I’ve gotten out of the habit of listening to myself, so I won’t listen with you. And I’ve talked so much, too much, about the shooting on Twitter that I don’t care to do too muchh of it here.

This is all so unbearably sad. Three kids dead. (One of them a father of two, another a father of one it seems.) All of them with their lives ahead of them. Three more shot. One in critical condition with a head wound. All of them under 21. A suspect at large. And there is no good reason for any of it.

Chief of the Auburn Police Department, Tommy Dawson, holds up a picture of suspect Desmonte Leonard for the media:

Dawson

The story goes on. The manhunt has shifted to Montgomery, the hometown of the police’s suspect. There are nine agencies involved in the search. Two have been arrested for hindering prosecution. We spent the night watching television, thinking they’ve got the suspect holed up in a house in east Montgomery. (Update: No one was there, after eight hours of waiting, surrounding and inch-by-inch searching in a tear gas-filled attic.)

So several families are in the height of grief. A community wonders how this could happen int heir home. A person is on the run. Some stories you just wish didn’t happen, but this one has only gotten started.


4
Jun 12

Burned lots of watts, ate lots of pizza

I rode a spin bike today with a device that measures wattage, the true indicator of how badly the people in front are punishing you. The more watts you’re putting out the more you’re working.

It seems I can generate enough power to turn a very small turbine. But only for a few moments.

My bike’s computer doesn’t register watts, which is probably good, because I’d start concentrating on my lack of power and do who knows what. Besides, I mean, pedal harder.

But, res firma mitescere nescit, and all that.

So I tried reading up on watts, at least to the point where the formulas kick in. If you get enough formulae elsewhere in your life you really don’t want it in your recreation. So I tried to find things like your typical cycling wattage, just to see how far human physiology — by which I mean someone else’s, not mine — can go. This, like so much of everything, is variable, which is the firma part of the Latin, I guess.

And since I had to look up American Flyer to get the expression right, and since someone made a spoof trailer about the movie:

Which is not especially a spoof since that’s the precise plot of the movie. But, look: Kevin Costner! WIth something under his nose!

We had dinner with our friends Kate and John last night. Pizza. A big table of hungry people devouring smallish sized thin crust pizzas. And then ordering another one. Or maybe two more.

They were good.