Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Waste to Energy Plants in U.S.? NIMBY!

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

Fascinating article about the growing, very successful methods of converting garbage to clean energy in Denmark and other European countries. The siting of these highly efficient plants is one of the main problems here in the U.S. But…..Not in my backyard! Sigh…..

New York Times

Alexie Wins Literary Award

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

The great Northwest writer Sherman Alexie just received the PEN/Faulkner Fiction award, for his book “War Dances.” This is good news, he’s a terrific writer.

New York Times

Roy DeCarava, 1919 – 2009

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

The great Harlem photographer is gone. There’s a fine slide show of his superb photos in the New York Times blog, Lens

Master Camera Repairman, Marty Forscher

Monday, October 12th, 2009

What a gifted camera repairman New York City’s Marty Forscher was. He passed away Sept. 30. I’d heard of his Professional Camera Repair Service, but didn’t know anything about the legendary Forscher until I read about him in today’s New York Times. What a talented, amazing person.

New York Times

A glimpse of Anne Frank on Film

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

I’ve never forgotten the visit I made to the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam years ago, and seeing this brief image on film of Anne Frank brought back memories of that deeply moving experience.

New York Times Lede

“Meow Spoken Here”

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

As a cat lover, all I can say is, ‘wow, what a nice person.”

Meow Spoken Here

(Via New York Times)

Guitar Legend Les Paul Dies

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Les Paul was a gifted designer of electric guitars, and was a brilliant “tinkerer” whose innovations for recording studios made him a giant in 20th century music. He was 94. Until recently, he drove into NYC every week to perform. I greatly enjoyed seeing the documentary “Les Paul – Chasing Sound” (2007) on DVD recently.

Les Paul Dies at 94

(Via New York Times Music)

John Hughes, Director of ’80s Comedies, Dies

Friday, August 7th, 2009

It’s sad news that the superb writer and director of some my favorite comedies passed away yesterday during a visit to New York City. I’ll be watching Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, Planes Trains and Automobiles, and Uncle Buck again soon, in tribute to this gifted filmmaker.

John Hughes, Director of ’80s Comedies, Dies at 59: “Mr. Hughes helped define a generation with films like ‘The Breakfast Club,’ ‘Sixteen Candles’ and ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.’

(Via New York Times)

Photojournalism: Tehran

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

A new, excellent post at the New York Times blog Lens:

On Assignment: Covering Tehran: “Newsha Tavakolian is a 28-year-old Iranian photographer who has found herself in the middle of the uproar dividing her country. She describes the scene in her own words.”

It’s a great interview. Bravo, Newsha Tavakolian. Be safe and keep photographing.

(Via Lens.)

“Help! I Have No TV Picture!”

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Help! I Have No TV Picture! Gadgetwise Blog – NYTimes

Michael Stravato gives good advice here, to those unprepared for the change from analog to digital TV signals:

“If you wake up tomorrow morning and all your TV channels are gone, I probably know why. Saturday, June 13, is the first day that analog broadcast television is officially history, except for low-power stations. (Some stations have already converted, a few more are doing it Friday.) From now on, all over-the-air TV broadcasts — the channels you watch using an antenna — are sent out digitally.”

(Via New York Times Personal Tech)

Bristol Museum’s got Banksy

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

Banksy in Bristol: “A look inside the Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery’s top secret Banksy exhibition. Plans for the summer show were kept from Bristol City Council chiefs until Friday – the day before it was due to open.”

(Via Coudal Partners Blended Feed)

Robert Reich on today’s bleak economy

Monday, April 6th, 2009

It’s a Depression

Literary Liars!

Friday, December 12th, 2008

Lied About Any Good Books Lately?: “According to a recent British survey in connection with the national Year of Reading, half of all men and one-third of all women have falsely claimed to have read books to impress friends and potential mates.”

(Via Paper Cuts.)

Robert Reich on “Why the Automakers Won’t Make Fuel-Efficient Cars”

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

Why the Automakers Won’t Make Fuel-Efficient Cars, Even as the Price of Being Bailed Out: “Telling automakers to make more fuel-efficient cars as a condition of being bailed out is like telling Citigroup or any other big bank to issue more affordable loans to Main Street as a condition of being bailed out. It won’t happen. Conditions like these make the public feel better about using their tax dollars to bail out private firms, but they’re useless. Automakers, like the big banks, will do the minimum required, and you can bet their lawyers and lobbyists will find ever more clever ways of avoiding even that minimum. Without lots of buyers who want fuel-efficient cars, automakers won’t produce them, period. (Without credit-worthy borrows able and willing to pay the costs of bank loans, they won’t be issued, either.)

You might think that the recent memories of $5-a-gallon gas would transform nearly everyone into prospective buyers of hybrids that get more than 30 miles a gallon. Think again. Consumer memories are dreadfully short. With gas prices settling down to half that sum, buyers (to the extent they still exist in this recession) are moving back to SUVs and pickup trucks, which automakers are all too happy to provide given the larger profits that come with gas-guzzlers. We’re witnessing a repeat of what occurred immediately after the oil crises of the 1970s. As soon as cheap gas was readily available, consumers who had said they wanted fuel efficiency went back to their old ways — and so did the Big Three.

What to do? Short of a gas tax that would push prices back up to $5-a-gallon — something deemed politically impossible — the only way to get lots more fuel-efficient cars is to put the costs of the gas-guzzlers on to the automakers themselves, as part of a cap-and-trade system requiring the major sources of carbon-dioxide emissions to pay for them. This would give automakers a powerful incentive to make more fuel-efficient cars and price them far more attractively than the guzzlers, thereby attracting consumers to them.

But a conditional bailout that flies in the face of consumer demand won’t work.”

(Via Robert Reich’s Blog.)

Yo-Yo’s Make a Comeback

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

I loved playing with Duncan yo-yo’s when I was a kid. And still do. I have 3. I bring one out from time to time, letting it spin in front of my cat Valentine, who loves chasing it around the living room. It’s a fun, simple toy. Nice for me to read that after years of disinterest, thanks to YouTube and a revitalized world yo-yo competition, they’re now looking fun and hip again, to a new generation of players.

The Ups and Downs of Competition: “The recent World Yo-Yo Contest drew 196 competitors from 20 countries to compete using yesterday’s forgotten up-and-down string toy.

(Via NYT > Home Page.)

Valentine

Sunscreen Safety

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

Questions About Sunscreen Safety: “A list of best and worst sunscreens has confused consumers.”

(Via Well.)

The Candidates and Beer

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

The Candidates and Beer: “We turn now to our man in Pennsylvania, who has a nice post about the candidates and their beer drinking. (Finally, an issue we can actually use to make a decision.) Since I have no personal insight, I’m turning everything over to Lew:

See the great picture above (from today’s Philadelphia Inquirer’s, taken by Sarah J. Glover) of Obama at Bethlehem Brew Works, teeing up for a beer with Peg Fegley — looks like maybe he’s got an ESB? (Yes, that’s what it was, according to an e-mail from BBW, and the Senator’s reaction was ‘Now that’s a good beer. I like that. That’s good stuff.‘) Hillary had a photo op boilermaker in Indiana — appropriate, in Purdue-land — and is reported in today’s Inky as being fond of Blue Moon with an orange slice (oh my, a Democrat, drinking a Coors product, that’s made in Canada? Oh, the humanity!).

Kidding aside, folks, this is good. Everything that puts beer or whiskey (anyone know what whiskey Hillary drank in Indiana? Ruch, I’m not posting any comments from you…) in the mainstream, as part of a normal person’s life — which it is — is good. Showing national figures drinking one drink without going on a mad binge is good.

And, well, Obama in a brewpub…that’s freakin’ gold, people.

Advantage: Obama.

Bonus pic:

(Via Beervana.)

The New Fiver

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

The New Fiver

A cool look at the new five dolar bill from Condé Nast Portfolio on the new U.S. five-dollar bill, including previous designs back to 1861.

(Via Daring Fireball.)

TPM Political Blog Wins Reporting Prize

Monday, February 25th, 2008

Joshua Micah Marshall’s blog began as a tiny political news operation. It’s great to see his insightful, well-written blog win the George Polk Award. Talking Points Memo started started in response to the presidential vote count fiasco in Florida seven years ago. Read on to learn how it’s grown in stature and size.

Blogger, Sans Pajamas, Rakes Muck and a Prize: “Cited for its reporting on the firing of eight U.S. attorneys, the political blog Talking Points Memo became the first Internet-only news operation to win the George Polk Award.”

(Via NYT > Technology.)

Obama, Japan

Thursday, February 21st, 2008

Obama, Japan: “Guess who they’re rooting for in Obama, Japan?”

(Via Coudal Partners Blended Feed.)