Corleone politics

Current Events No Comments »

The New York Times has a piece on Obama suspending his campaign to visit his ailing grandmother and the potential political implications. In one of the comments, someone defends Obama’s visit, saying we belong to “family before country”. Sounds like that line from the end of “Godfather II” when, in a flashback to before the first movie, Michael tells his brothers he’s enlisted in the Marines:

MICHAEL – They risk, they risk their lives for their country.

SONNY – Your country’s not your blood — you remember that.

MICHAEL – I don’t feel that way.

SONNY – Well if you don’t feel that way why don’t you just quit college and go to — go to join the Army.

MICHAEL – I did — I enlisted in the Marines.

Someone should write a book: “Everything You Need To Know Can Be Found In The Godfather Movies”.

3d12

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As you would expect, the Internets are abuzz with the news of the passing of Dungeons & Dragons co-creator Gary Gygax. Over at MetaFilter, the obligatory obituary post has garnered over 300 posts at last check, many of them deeply heartfelt and equally eloquent. To wit:

In a very serious way, the work Gygax authored and inspired has influenced American culture in as profound a way as the work of Lucas, Roddenberry, and other “sci-fi/fantasy” pop-culture leaders whose names are much more of a household word. The seven-million plus World of Warcraft subscribers alone owe Gygax an enormous debt.

The MetaFilter post is titled “Gary Gygax has failed his saving throw,” and the title on the post’s page reads simply “HP -1″. Very nice.

MacWorld travelogue

Apple, Current Events 1 Comment »

Just back from the annual MacWorld Conference and Expo in San Francisco. This year marked Berklee’s fifth MacWorld appearance and third in San Francisco. We’re invited out by the show organizers to do music-related presentations on the convention floor, setting up under the banner “Dream Studios: Making Music with the Mac.” A total of seven Berklee people were on hand performing various tasks. Mike Carerra, Bill D’Agostino and I were primarily responsible for setting up and manning our exhibit area. Mike is the main presenter, handling the duties for two, one hour-plus demonstrations each day.

Monday was setup day. We spent most of the day getting all of the gear unpacked and setup on and around the stage. This year the Dream Studio pavilion was on the convention floor in Moscone West, downstairs from where the keynote would be held on Tuesday. The convention floor in West centered around music, gaming, and digital imaging and included a podcast stage and a training area.

Late Monday night we headed out to the North Beach area of the city for something to eat. On the way back there was some commotion on the sidewalk behind us as two people on Segway’s were making their way down the hill. As they got closer, I heard Mike say “How you doing, Mr. Wozniak?” Yup. THAT Steve Wozniak. He continued by and I also said hello; both greetings earned a polite “very good, thank you” (or something like that) and he and his companion continued their way down the hill. I tried to get a quick movie on the Treo, but it didn’t come out all that great; it’s got kind of an “X-Files”/Loch Ness monster quailty to it.

Tuesday morning we joined several thousand other folks for the show kickoff: Steve Jobs keynote address. Some people started to wait in line almost a full day before the keynote and by 8 a.m. the line was already snaked through the convention floor, out the side door, down one side of the convention center and then around the length of the front of the building. The keynote went well, with the introduction of an updated AppleTV and iTunes movie rentals and the unveiling of the ultra-thin MacBook Air.

After the keynote, we were back at the booth. Mike kicked off the day with the Dream Studios presentation (“what you need and what to get,” as they put it on the signage). Tony Marvuglio followed with an hour on using the Mac with the guitar and Mike finished off the day with the “putting it all together” demonstration, where he built the Journey song “Don’t Stop Believing” one instrument track at a time. Bill jumps in on that presentation, giving a virtual drums demo and then playing the “Don’t Stop” drum track. Each presentation drew dozens of people to the booth, with folks filling the seats and standing in the aisles to listen in.


MacWorld Blast ticket

That night, the MacWorld folks hosted a party not too far from the convention center with the band Devo headlining. The crowd was mostly made up of covention attendess, many in red plastic Devo flower pot hats, but there was a strong contingent of diehard fans of the band. Mike, Bill and I found ourselves a spot on the lower level of the floor and at one point were about five people back from the stage. The band tore through an hour-long set that included the iconic “Whip It” and “Jocko Homo” (Are we not men? We are D-E-V-O).


Shaw Blades pass

After our demonstrations wrapped up on Wednesday, we headed over to the south hall to a Harman International invitation-only event. (Harman was the main sponsor of the Berklee booth this year.) Harman was set up In a small room at the end of a corridor off the main convention floor. Inside, 80s rockers Jack Blades (Night Ranger) and Tommy Shaw (Styx) were performing a live acoustic set. Rather than setup amps and speakers, Harman piped the whole performance out via wireless AKG headphones. The room was jammed with about 40 headphone wearing folks, some spilling out into the hallway. The setlist featured some classic rock staples and included “Time Of The Season,” “Lucky Man,” “I Am A Rock,” and “High Enough,” which the pair wrote with Ted Nugent during their time together in Damn Yankees. After Shaw sang Night Ranger’s “Sister Christian,” Blades explained that drummer Kelly Keagy’s original lyrics referred to his sister, Christy. After Keagy played the song for the band the first time, they convinced him to change the lyrics from “Christy” to “Christian.” Blades said that the song has been interepted a lot of different ways over the years, including one woman at a grocery checkout line in Minnesota who asked if the song was about a drug dealing nun.

By mid-week we managed to find a few free moments to check out the rest of the show, most notably the areas in the other hall. The convention floor in Moscone South was, as usual, dominated by the Apple booth at its center. Dozens of the new MacBook Air laptops were on display and convention goers queued two and three deep to get their hands on them. (A contrast to last year when two sole iPhones twirled inside of guarded glass pillars, out of the reach and touch of the drooling masses.) Apple has a ton of employees on the show floor: each demo computer has an Apple employee standing next to it to answer questions. At the same time, they have stages and seating areas where live Leopard and other software demonstrations are going on all day.


Beat Museum ticket

With the show wrapped up on Friday, we had the weekend to explore the city. Saturday afternoon we made the trip out to Alcatraz and did the self-guided audio tour. On the boat on the way back from Alcatraz we ran into long-time Mac enthusiast and author, Andy Ihnaktho. We chatted him up about the show, the keynote, the iPhone and other Mac/geek related topics. (Andy has a great set of annotated photos he took of his personal tour of Alcatraz over at his Flickr site.)

Later that night we made a return trip to the restaurant Tres Agaves, which is co-owned by rocker Sammy Hagar. It’s an authentic Mexican restaurant featuring a full tequila bar. And it’s not done up like a Planet Hollywood or a Hard Rock Cafe. You wouldn’t know that Sammy Hagar had anything to do with it: no guitars on the wall or other rock memorabilia in site. Just great food and kick-ass margaritas.

Sunday the three of us made the early trek out to a sports bar to check out the Patriots-San Diego game. The three-oclock Foxborough start translated into a noon start in San Francisco. It’s a little weird ordering breakfast 20 minutes before kickoff. The game was good for the few Patriots fans in the bar (me, Mike and about five other people), but the rest of the crowd was cheering on San Diego.


Alcatraz ticket

That night we headed back to North Beach for dinner and then made a stop at the Beat Museum. The museum chronicled the Beat writers (Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsburg, William Burroughs, et al.) and traced their rise through the 50s and 60s. The museum exhibits covered most of the writers, with much of the space devoted to Kerouac and Ginsburg. The first exhibit features Neal Cassady who was the inspiration for Dean Moriarty in Kerouac’s “On The Road” and later drove Ken Kensey’s bus as it crisscrossed the country (as documented in Tom Wolfe’s “The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test”). Cassady, as the museum guide explained, can be noted for his appearance at the dawn of the Beats and bridging the gap with the counter-culture generation that followed. The museum’s displays (filling four rooms on two floors) are stocked with original manuscipts, early editions and newspaper and magazines chronicling the authors. The museum store had a ton of well-curated books (as you would imagine), dozens of original prints and photographs, t-shirts, post cards, DVDs and more.

And with that, we wrapped up our stay. All in all, a good week to be in San Francisco.

(If you’re on a Mac and want to see some pictures from our week in San Francisco, point your OS X Screen Saver to my .Mac account “jvalerio”. There’s about 90 slides there, hitting all of the major events of the week.)

No joy in Mudville

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The shock of the Patriots loss still hangs heavy in Boston. As one of the wrap-ups in the Boston Globe noted, this year’s Super Bowl marked the sixth world championship game for New England teams in the last six years, but was the only one “we” didn’t win.

The Boston Globe’s Dan Shaugnessey had the best lead of the day, stealing an appropriate line from Don McLean’s “American Pie”.

There’ll be no Hub parade on Super Tuesday. No commemorative books about “Path to Perfection.” In New England, the church bells all are broken.

The newest free daily newspaper in town, Boston Now, apparently didn’t care enough to wait for the game to be over to print their newspaper, making it a waste of time even picking it up Monday. They managed to get a full spread color picture of Laurence Maroney’s second quarter touchdown on their front page, but the stories inside were all game-day previews. And this is isn’t the first time that they’ve gone to bed (as it’s called) too early. The day after last month’s New Hampshire presidential primary, which Hillary Clinton won despite the early polls predicting otherwise, the Now lead with a full page Barak Obama photo and had none of the previous night’s results. Newspapers need deadlines to function, but going to press so early as to make the newspaper irrelevant the next day doesn’t make much sense.

Primary sources

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My good friend Ray Sullivan and I took a day trip to New Hampshire just ahead of their presidential primary a couple weeks back. We made a similar trip in 2004, visiting a bunch of the candidates headquarters and attending a Joe Leiberman speech. (The 2004 trip video is here and “Joementum” video here.)

This time out we had the day’s agendas for Clinton, Edwards and Obama and were aiming to hit a couple of events. We started with an Obama event and ended up dedicating most of the day to it. The speech was at a public high school and the initial line of people stretched down one side of the building, through a parking lot and out onto the sidewalk, where we joined it. The auditorium filled up fast and the organizers setup an overflow room in the school’s cafeteria (that’s where we were). The place was pretty chaotic: along with the hundreds of folks waiting to see Obama, there was a girls basketball game going on in an adjacent gymnasium and a youth wrestling tournament somewhere down the hall. Obama was uncharacteristically late and the speech started almost three hours after it was scheduled. Obama spoke for almost 30 minutes and then made a stop in the cafeteria to shake some hands and say a quick thank you.

Ray got some pictures and video. Check it out:



Stewart reups with “The Daily Show”

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Media scribe Dan Kennedy explores Jon Stewart and The Daily Show in the current issue of the “Providence Phoenix”.

He stoops to conquer. Is Jon Stewart too smart for his own good? Not as long as he keeps up the dick jokes.

SOME HALF-DOZEN years after assuming the anchor desk at The Daily Show and transforming what had been a celebrity-driven yukfest into biting political satire, the 42-year-old Stewart and his fellow performers and writers have reached the top of the heap. Stewart was named 2004 Entertainer of the Year by Entertainment Weekly. Stewart and company’s America (The Book): A Citizen’s Guide to Democracy Inaction — banned by Wal-Mart for its stunningly real-looking photographs of naked Supreme Court justices — remains near the top of the bestseller lists months after it was published. Last year, surveys showed that The Daily Show was the top news source for young viewers, and that Stewart’s audience was remarkably well-informed about current events. Recently Stewart signed a new, long-term contract that will carry him through the 2008 presidential campaign.

Apple top brand

Apple, Current Events No Comments »

Lead by the enormous popularity of the iPod, Apple has been named the top brand by readers at brandchannel.com.

It’s hard to imagine a brand having a shinier year than Apple. Notably punctuated with iMacs, iPods and iTunes, Apple’s 2004 presence was felt in the press, in ads and on the streets, with iPod coming to define the word “ubiquitous.” Coupled with strong revenue, Apple reported a net profit of US$ 295 million in the last quarter of 2004 alone and a 2004 overall net income growth of 300 percent. Yes, 300 percent.

At Apple’s core is great innovation, beautiful design and an ability to bring warmth and passion to those who may be completely incurious about technical gadgetry but need it nonetheless to survive in today’s world.

From U2 to “You too?,” the iPod alone sold 4.6 million units in the last quarter, practically doubling sales since its launch. (There are now about 10 million pod-addicts on the planet.) Meanwhile, iMac sales tripled as Apple’s overall computer sales rose by 26 percent over 2003 sales. Music division iTunes became the blueprint for Napster-alternative online music sales. And swanky retail outlets gave Apple enthusiasts a chance to worship or interact directly with the company as well as each other.

Rounding out the top five brands are: Google (the top brand in 2002 & 2003), Ikea, Starbucks, and Al Jazeera. Also at MSNBC: “Apple, Ikea, Al Jazeera among top global brands.”

Here’s Johnny… errr…. Dave!

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We should have known that Johnny Carson couldn’t stay completely out show business forever. Seems that Johnny keeps up on the news and when he comes with up a good joke, he sends it off to Dave Letterman. Can’t wait to see Dave hold up an envelope to his head… “Sis boom bah… the sound of a sheep exploding”. UPDATE: In case you’ve been living under a rock, Johnny Carson died last weekend.

Truth in movie advertising

Current Events 1 Comment »

A Connecticut lawmaker wants movie theaters to print the real time a movie is going to start, after all of the commercials and previews have been shown.

Rep. Andrew Fleischmann is proposing legislation to force movie listings to print the time the previews start, and when the movies start.

“We’re being manipulated right now. We’re being robbed of our freedom of choice because we’re not told when the actual movie will begin,” said Fleischmann, D-West Hartford.

As one of the folks quoted in the story mentions, it’s not the movie previews that are so annoying, it’s all the non-theatrical commercials that get to be too much. And didn’t Homer freak out about this once on “The Simpsons”? “Start the movie! Start the movie!”

Lonesome whale

Current Events 1 Comment »

There have been stories popping up lately about a solitary whale that scientists have been tracking for over a decade.

For the last 12 years, a single solitary whale whose vocalizations match no known living species has been tracked across the Northeast Pacific. Its wanderings match no known migratory patterns of any living whale species. Its vocalizations have also subtly deepened over the years, indicating that the whale is maturing and ageing. And, during the entire 12 year span that it has been tracked, it has been calling out for contact from others of its own kind.

Lots of info and supplemental links at this kuro5hin posting.

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