9 December 02011 (Happy birthday!):
ACME-8--Another Round Of Worthy Holiday Music
It had been my plan since about
last February for the next annual Christmas music entry to be
"Remakes That Don't Suck". However, after spending way too
much time in 02011 considering some of the most ill-conceived
ideas ever re-recorded, I have dropped that plan. I only
found three, one of which is kind of questionable. While
they're included below, here's my 2K11 holiday mix:
1. "Santa Baby", Madonna. Eartha Kitt
did a fine job with the original, and the mid-01980's version of
Madonna was a dead-on accurate choice for this version.
Laurie happens to like this tune, which is not an insignificant
consideration.
2. "Deck Us All With Boston Charlie", from Pogo. Last
year's list included a "Deck the Halls" parody as the #2 track,
and this one seems to be an appropriate followup--and possibly the
start of a tradition around here. The linked version here
only includes the first verse--there may be five
more in the canonical list, but the first is the best by a
wide margin, from both musical and technical perspectives.
3. "Snoopy's
Christmas", Royal Guardsmen. As long as we've
got one comic strip tune here, let's keep the theme going.
4. "Christmastime
Is Here", Vince Guaraldi and Orchestra. Three
in a row from the comics. (I'll stop now.) Here's a
holiday tune that should just not ever be remade. What Toni
Braxton did to this song is criminal, in my opinion.
5. "It's A
Marshmallow World", Dean Martin. "MW" has a
curiously cloudy history, so much so that it was difficult to pin
down who recorded this first. That having been said, whether
or not it was Frank Sinatra, it was not Dean Martin. That having been said, and I
cannot stress this enough, this is not a Christmas song.
There's no real mention of any winter holiday, and so much like
"Jingle Bells", "Frosty the Snowman", and "Winter Wonderland", to
name a few, radio stations could continue playing this into
February--yet they don't. Tragic.
6. "What Is
Christmas?", Trans-Siberian Orchestra. I have
to tip the ol' visor to a holiday tune with a stanza like "What is
Christmas?/Candles everywhere/A fire hazard/Any other day".
The point made slightly earlier on, that Christmas may just be "an
ex-cuse to tolerate snow", is also worthy.
7. "Christmas
Dragnet", Stan Freberg. This one is a
particularly timely and poignant entry, coming as it done on the
heels of Harry
Morgan's death Wednesday. As a Freberg tune/sketch, it
falls somewhat uncomfortably in between "St. George and the
Dragonet" and "Green Chri$tma$", combining the features of each
without quite rising to the level of either. But since Joe
Friday is more on our minds this week than usual, and since the
piece is not by any stretch awful, here it is.
8. "7:00 News/Silent Night", Simon & Garfunkel.
Third (and final) on the list of worthy remakes, this is one that
could easily be remade again--all you'd need to do is record a new
news track to be read over the tune. This could be a
(depressing) annual tradition. That of course, is only sort
of a good thing.
I am reminded, in considering this track, of WLS-Chicago's Holiday
Festival of Music, which was noted for tracking Christmas
preparations and explaining holiday traditions at the top of each
hour in and around holiday tunes during the countdown to midnight
on 24/5 December. In the midnight segment, there's an
extended piece which includes a poll-taker asking people what
their favorite Christmas song is, and "SN" heads the list--by
design, of course, because the aircheck leads into a version of
the song. Nonetheless, I'm not sure that that would really
win an open poll. I suspect its popularity on that piece is
more a matter of "I must think of some Christmas song
quickly...um...Silent Night!" than any real preference for the
tune.
And while it would be nice to have this one end the collection,
you can't go out on a track that closes by talking about 5 more
years of war in Vietnam, so...
9."Christmas
In Heaven", Monty Python.
This one makes the cut in part because it provides a tenuous
connection between another very non-Christmas song and
Christmas. One of the very non-Christmas songs that still
manage to slip in to "all-Christmas, all-the-time" radio playlists
is "My Favorite Things", from The
Sound of Music. I can't explain it, and certainly
won't try. The closest connection between that tune and any
winter holiday is found in a passage from this song: "It's
Christmas is heaven/There's great films on TV/The Sound of Music twice an
hour/And Jaws 1, 2, and
3".
I doubt that that's the reason why we hear this song in December
(and in no other months of the year), but I suspect it's the best
explanation we're going to get. And it's still not
a holiday tune.
Over at xkcd, there's a
slightly different take on holiday music today which makes some of
the same points I've been hinting at for the past 7+ years:
Io Saturnalia!
M-->
21 November 02011 (16 years
later...): Neither A Goal Nor An Accomplishment, But Still
Something Worth Mentioning
It was never a goal of mine to be
an entry in the index of a book*. Yet in the index of the
recently-published Engaging
Resistance: How Ordinary People Successfully Champion Change
by Aaron Anderson, one finds the following entry:
Bolman,
Mark, 80, 85, 86
Okay, so my name is
misspelled. Nonetheless, when you turn to page 85 and read
about "a young math professor who wore red sneakers like a
trademark", it's pretty clear who is being referred to.
This book is a study of managing conflict in colleges and
universities, and uses one of my former employers and Portland
State University as case studies. I spoke to the author
for over an hour when he was researching things. While
there are some errors in people's perceptions of what went on,
it's reasonably accurate in most of the particulars. I
doubt that I'll be fully vindicated in the final analysis (I
haven't finished reading the whole book yet), but it's
interesting in a dark way to see what's now being said about
those years and that chaos.
M-->
*--Yearbooks don't count.
11 November 02011: Very Quick Notes
1. Happy anniversary yesterday. Hope the Atlantic was kind to
you.
2. Here
is the only accounting of the Penn State scandal that is, in my
opinion, worth reading.
3. As to the whole 11/11/11 hype, I think this
quote captures a lot of the silliness of the day:
“It’s
hype,” Las Vegas roulette-dealer-turned-numerologist Judith
Gabriel said. “People get caught up in the drama and
misinterpret the facts.”
When a numerologist is calling you misguided, you may
safely be said to be far off the beaten path to good sense.
M-->
30 October 02011: Desperately
Seeking The Bright Side
Loyal reader Kristie of Allen Park, MI has reported that Detroit
radio station WMGC-FM went all-Christmas yesterday. That is,
they started playing
all-Christmas music before Halloween. As I said on
Facebook yesterday, this is wrong on every conceivable level.
However, in the spirit of...something, at least Magic-105's
listeners will be spared the questionable Halloween music that
will be flooding the airwaves tomorrow (and indeed, already
started last week in some circles). While there's a rich
trove of Halloween novelty music, mainstream music hasn't really
embraced the holiday, and so we're in for many repetitions of
"Thriller", a few unnecessary parodies of "Monster Mash", and some
horror movie tunes. Not exactly a "must-listen" experience,
except for "Werewolves of London".
To call my reasoning on this point "grasping at straws" is almost
unfair to straws.
M-->
26
October 02011*: In Death, As In Comedy...
it all comes down to timing.
In the outpouring of grief--some of it genuine, some of it almost
cultish in its devotion--surrounding the death of Steve Jobs, most
of the nation lost sight of the loss of a far more important
figure in computing when Dennis
Ritchie passed away on 8 October. The man invented the
programming language C, co-created the Unix operating system, and
originated the "Hello, world!" program that is a staple of
introductory programming courses. When I have taught C,
BASIC, or C++, I have modified that to "Yo, Earth!", but that's
just me being whimsical.
That's 2.1 accomplishments of lasting significance, for which he
deserved a far better memorial. In that way, Ritchie will
take his place alongside such luminaries as Groucho Marx and
Mother Teresa, who mis-timed their deaths to occur too close to
far more visible--though not more accomplished--figures (Elvis
Presley and Princess Diana, for those without the initiative to
check on this themselves). I understand that the three
more-celebrated folks all died young, but that doesn't justify the
imbalance of recognition.
To borrow from The Economist's
obituary linked above: printf("goodbye, Dennis\n");
And thank you.
M-->
*--As of today, and only
as of today, I can click on my USA Today bookmark and not get the 9/11
drama. It's about time. Of course, it was also about
time 6 weeks ago.
10
October 02011*: On Baseball Geography
So the four World Series semifinalists are from Dallas, Detroit,
Milwaukee, and St. Louis. We might as well start calling it the
"Flyover Series" right now.
The honchos at MLB HQ must be very unhappy over the way things
have played out--no New York teams left, no California teams left,
nothing all that mediagenic about the four hometowns
remaining. Even the team from Dallas isn't using the city's
name. Sportswriters too--not only are there no really
glamorous road trips left for them, there's a very real
possibility of some rather unpleasant weather for the games that
remain, and I don't just mean the heavy rain in Texas.
To which I say: Ha.
M-->
*--All indicators are that USA
Today continues to wallow in post-9/11 dysphoria.
30
September 02011: Notes As The Third Quarter Closes
1. USA
Today is still wallowing
in post-9/11/01 aftermath darkness (The Markives, 19 September
02011). Cut it out, folks.
2. I find it amusing, bordering on depressing, that so much of the
ongoing remembrance of 9/11/1 is tied to the phrase "Never
forget"--like that's possible. Too many people--including
but not limited to USAT--have
too much interest in dragging this memory out again and again and
again. The obsession may subside next year--a lot of the
increased hype this year seems to be connected to the fact that
we're at year 10, a nice round number--but it will surely return.
3. My solution to the recent college sports conference realignment
madness is simple: The Big East should stop sponsoring
football. They have never, to my view, been a legitimate BCS
participant--that doesn't matter--and they have far too many
members (6 out of 14 once the current transitions shake out) who
don't offer the sport at the FBS level*. That does.
Two birds, one rock. You're welcome, world.
Take that conference out of the equation, and you free up a
collection of schools that could stabilize the Big XII, Conference
USA, and the Mountain West, with a new BCS berth going to the last
of those three. We can talk about the problem of the Sun
Belt Conference later.
M-->
*--Plus the enigma that is the folks from northwest
Indiana, whose presence doesn't improve the conference's case.
21 September 02011: The
Persistence of Time and Memory
Long-time readers may recall that I saluted Mathew Brennan's birth
back in 02007 by noting that his birth coincided with the US and
Canadian dollars reaching parity with each other for the first
time in my memory. In fairness, and on the day after Matt's
4th birthday, I am compelled to point out that today, the Canadian
dollar is worth $0.9971990086 US--for the first time in his life,
the US dollar is worth (a nearly undetectable fraction, but
still...) more than its counterpart from our friends to the north.
Data from the good folks at xe.com,
who have sent me a daily email with current exchange rates for
years now, which has made this mild obsession possible.
Oh, and happy birthday, Mathew.
M-->
19 September 02011: Just One Word
for the folks over at USA Today: Nine-elevenoughalready! (A
coined word, but one that's quite necessary at this point in
spacetime.)
As I type this (2:47 PM EDT), the target of that link, which is
their main page, continues to be draped in black and awash in
September 11, 02001 reminiscing.
There's such a thing as an appropriate remembrance, and there's
wallowing in an aftermath. This is the latter. We had
plenty of both last week, and this is taking it too far in time.
Stop it. A big part of USAT's
early appeal was its use of color in the daily newspaper; it is
odd in the extreme that they've cast that aside for this long.
M-->
11 September 02011: Just One
Question
But first, some highlights from last night:
Now to the question: What will Sports
Illustrated decide is more worthy of the cover of next
week's issue than Michigan's 35-31 triumph over Notre Dame?
This is a non-scientific survey posing as an interest of mine, but
I've noticed over the years that ND beating U-M frequently makes
the cover. Michigan winning? Not so much. There
are exceptions, but the general pattern is as I have described it.
We shall see later this week.
M-->
7 September 02011: A Memiversary
Programming Note
Here's a headline I've been hoping to see for quite some time now:
Responsible
Cable News Outlets To Devote Sensible Amount Of Airtime To 10th
Anniversary Of 9/11
Unfortunately, and yet somehow fortunately at the same time, it's
from The
Onion.
2
September 02011 (Has it really been a month already?
Oops.): The Most Versatile Spanish Word...
is undeniably "imbécil". (No translation required, I trust.)
Such an audacious claim as that requires explanation: While
visiting the Cayman Islands last month, we had occasion to sample
the television programming of the Warner Channel, broadcast from
Miami for Latin America. "WB Super Prime" brings American
primetime TV to that market, with the amusing and necessary
addition of Spanish subtitles. In watching Two and a Half Men and
reading along, as I am prone to do, I noticed two things:
First, that the subtitles don't always represent a faithful
translation. (I don't know a lot of Spanish, but I know
enough to find omissions.) No surprise there.
Second, that the word "imbécil" finds frequent use as an
all-purpose noun for words that I can only assume don't translate
well from English. (The mind of the reader is left to
imagine what those might be.)
On to other matters: The College Football Embarrassment Of The
Week Award goes to the University of Utah, which not only
scheduled a game for yesterday against a Football Championship
Series opponent (Montana State), but canceled
afternoon and evening classes to accommodate the game.
Another example of "this target isn't even a challenge".
M-->
1 August 02011: A Modest Proposal
Without Cannibalism
As we, collectively and as a nation, tease out the ins and
outs of the latest product of our "fascism of absolute freedom"
government that is the proposed debt ceiling pact, I have one
simple suggestion that I think would make what's coming both more
interesting and more sensible:
With
regard to this 12-person committee that's charged with proposing
how we're going to get the rest of the way out of this so-called
mess, John Boehner should appoint the
Democratic representatives and Harry Reid should get to choose
the Republicans.
No veto power, no right of refusal, no votes--each side gets to
pick whom the other side sends into the mess. I can almost
guarantee that this will get us a more reasonable group of 12
people than what we're going to get otherwise.
M-->
15
July 02011: Something For The Children
Recently, I got an email from Mom alerting me to the language
issue on Crayola crayons:
Just
read the latest installment of the Markives and wondered if you
knew that Crayola now lists the color names on each crayon in
three (count 'em, 3) languages?
How PC can you get? Think of all the languages they
are slighting.
I agree. There's only one solution: Esperanto (and only
Esperanto)!
Fortunately, this coincides with one of my occasional "I should
really brush up on my Esperanto" quests*. I'll start with
the standard 8-pack: ruĝa, oranĝkolora**, flava, verda, blua,
purpura, bruna, & nigra. And a bonus color from the
48-pack: dolcamara. That leaves 39 for the good folks at
Crayola to tease out. I'm not sure how "raw sienna"
translates.
Speaking of dumb ideas related to children's playthings, the
Colorado Department of Human Services is considering a proposal
that will require day care providers to provide dolls in at least
three races. This is another example of "where isn't the joke?".
Here's mine: How about Human, Romulan, and Klingon--would that
count? It ought to--and it might make for a better day care
experience for the kids.
M-->
*--The last time I had one of those, I reached the limit of
100 online renewals (~ 4 years) on my Esperanto book checked out
from the MSU library and then
had to return it. I think that if you reach that limit
without someone else wanting the book, there should be an
understanding that, although the library retains ownership, you
get to retain possession indefinitely.
**--Esperanto distinguishes between orange
the color and orange the fruit (the latter is translated
as "oranĝo"). Good on them.
1 July 02011*: Notes From Around
The I'net
Revisiting a couple of past obsessions:
As I mentioned last year, I am a fan of slow-motion/high-speed
photography, as pioneered by Harold Edgerton. Here's another
neat example, of a cymbal being struck and filmed at 1000
frames/second. One would think they could have dusted the
cymbal before hitting it, though.
As I mentioned many years ago, there are only 48 "real" colors,
to my mind. In an effort to deny this fundamental truth of
the universe, the paint industry has gone further off the deep
end than the Crayola people, as this
recent
article indicates.
Let me be clear: "Weekend in the Country" is not a
color. Nor is "Tornado Watch".
M-->
*--As of today, I am now officially in my "late
40's". I appear to be taking it well.
Also as of today, the Big Ten has 12 teams and the Big 12 has
10.
26
June
02011: Samoa Canceled My Birthday
Not permanently--just for 02011. I'm sure it's nothing
personal.
Samoa has decided to reroute the International Date Line so
they're on the same side as Australia, with whom they have closer
trade relationships, rather than the same side as the USA*.
Fair enough. This requires that they basically skip a day to
effect the change, and after a brief flirtation with wiping out
New Year's Eve 02011, the
decision
has
been
made to X out December 30.
I understand this decision, and the rationalist in me supports it
completely. However, the personal impact is something I
cannot be so casual about.
It's not uncommon to see feature articles appearing in late
December that list the perceived disadvantages of a birthday in
the weekettes surrounding Christmas. I've always been
skeptical about these--personally, I've never understood what's so
bad about having one's birthday gifts wrapped in Christmas paper,
and I think that anyone who sticks a candle into a fruitcake** is,
ipso facto, a little nuts
to begin with. But this threat--short-lived though it may
be--is a new one.
That having been said, I spent some time playing on the I'net last
night, plotting a hypothetical trip out there for that
non-day. It might, on some level, be fun to be in Samoa when
the calendar flips from Dec. 29 to Dec. 31, miss a birthday, and
in some sense not get a
year older. Why should the Feb. 29 babies get all of the
fun?
Reasonable flight schedules are available, as are unreasonable
ones. Detroit --> Denver --> Las Vegas --> Honolulu
--> Apia, anyone? Didn't think so.
M-->
*--They have also switched from driving on the right side
of the road to the left to foster closer ties (and cheaper
imported cars) with Australia.
**--Which I have never seen done.
3 June 02011: Something Old,
Something New
The new: The family portrait on the main
page, which may have been the first time since the clan expanded
to 21 people that all 21 were in the same place at once.
Such a convergence as that needs to be recorded. Natalie's
not facing the camera, but we have some time to work with her on
that. Certain of my nephices have come to understand what
they should do when Uncle Mark--> points a camera at them, so
there's some expert understanding that we can tap.
The old:
In the spirit of an ancient
I'net tradition, it's once again time to post the iconic
Campbell's Cream of Mushroom soup can as an indicator that I won't
be posting here for awhile. My annual trip to grade AP
Calculus exams starts tomorrow and runs for 12 days.
M-->
31 May 02011: Weekend Box Office,
And What It Means For Me
The
Hangover
Part II made somewhere north of $117 million in its
opening weekend, despite the frequent panning from film
critics. (Cheer up, guys: The week after Christmas is
coming.) In it, my doppelgänger Zach Galifianakis
is sporting a new look, with a shaved head.
I didn't inspire that, and I won't be mimicking it.
For my own part, I will be content to sport the "classic Alan"
look, for which I have been recognized on my last three Las Vegas
trips. In the most recent installment, I was walking along
the Strip when a guy riding in a limousine got my attention and
asked "Hey, are you him?"
Not an easy question to answer, depending as it does on the value
assigned to the variable "him" in that proposed equation. I
established that he was looking for Zach G., and confirmed that I
was not that "him". He nonetheless called his female
companion to the window to see me.
I hold out some hope that Hangover
III--for there will surely be one--will return to the
scene of the original.
M-->
26 May 02011: TV Scoreboard
It was a very bad year for new TV
shows set in New York City for no good reason, a pastime which I
decried years ago (The Markives, 5 November
02004). It was with some small measure of regret (for these
shows were actually not bad) mixed with a certain satisfaction
that I noted that Better With
You and Mad Love
were both canceled after their first season.
Now if we could also get the network powers that be to stop these
shows before they reach the air, or at least send a flood of notes
to change the location, then...well, the world won't be measurably
better, but I'd like it more.
In another curious geographical trend, it was also a bad season
for sitcoms set in San Diego, as we are losing both $#*! My Dad Says and Mr. Sunshine. This, of
course, continues a curse going all the way back to That 80's Show. Chicago
fared far better, with both Mike
& Molly and Happy
Endings making it through to the fall schedule--although
why the latter did so is something of a mystery to me.
M-->
25 May 02011: If At First You Don't
Succeed...
change the rules.
Laurie and I returned, somewhat
more quickly than usual, to our preferred runaway of Las Vegas
last week, which meant a renewed quest for pictures of American
postal abbreviations among the signs of the city (The Markives,
29 March 02011). Nine were left at the start of our trip,
and four remain now. To get those five, however, I had to
modify some of the rules I set out at the start of that quest.
1. No more than one picture at
any one location: This was something of a "put this rule
in to make it more interesting" kind of thing, and thus it wasn't
something I felt too bad about discarding. I had gotten
Connecticut in March from the Bonanza
Gift Shop ("the world's largest", in their words), on a sign
advertising "Cactus".
All well and good. It was only on the return that I noticed
that they are also selling Indian
jewelry--and thus had a sign covering New Jersey.
Target acquired. Later on, I noticed (I don't know why I
didn't catch this the first time) that Bill's Gamblin' Hall and Saloon contained
an embedded New Hampshire abbreviation--the fact that I had
already tapped it for Illinois seemed like much less of a barrier.
2. Use official 2-letter USPS
abbreviations: I had actually relaxed this one twice in
March, once for Texas (Texas
Station didn't have any TX's that I could find, so I figured
the name would suffice) and once for Florida (My picture of the Fl
in "Flamingo"
picked up the "a" due to the font in use, which I decided wasn't
an imposition.). Montana, Maryland, and Minnesota were
captured by letting go of this restriction--it helps that one of
the major north-south streets near UNLV is Maryland Parkway.
That wasn't enough to nail down New Mexico, South Dakota,
Tennessee, or Vermont, but we'll be back in Nevada someday, and
the quest will continue.*
After that...who knows? I was toying with two-letter
Internet country codes as the next photo challenge, but
there are a lot of those. There are sensible restrictions
that could be used, though, so that may be next.
M-->
*--I also have to find abbreviations for the District of
Columbia, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and Puerto Rico.
3 May 02011: Aftermath
So on the eighth anniversary of the day former President George W.
Bush falsely announced "Mission Accomplished", Osama bin Laden was
killed. I guess we now have an upper bound on how much time
and effort was wasted on the distraction that was the invasion of
Iraq.
I rather like this
take on recent events and what they mean in the grand scheme
of things.
M-->
29 April 02011 (And a Joyous
International Plaid Day to all!!): Accumulata
1. In re: the royal wedding--Didn't we fight a war to get away from
these people?
2. Holiday gift guide: If you're looking for a Christmas gift for
either Jif & Dave or Dan & Anne, this
should be published just in time for the winter holidays.
Those lacking a sense of humor should not click through.
M-->
28 April 02011: A Questionable
Sports Feat, But A Great Mathematical Accomplishment
In the "Things I Learned En Route To Looking Up Other Things"
Department*, I found this:
On April 26,
the Chicago Cubs' record was
10-12, which means they missed out on being 11-11. The team had
previously
hit every .500 increment from 1-1 to 10-10. They did set a new
major league record, as two teams had previously made it to 9-9.
If there's an award for "Excellence In Mediocrity", I submit that
this surely qualifies. Given America's retreat from the
pursuit of excellence over the years, that award probably exists
somewhere.
Some (though not I) might call it "The Emmys".
M-->
*--Apologies to Sydney J. H.
18 April 02011: Some Weather, No?
On Sunday, 10 April, it was 85
degrees or so around these parts. Today, we have two inches
of new snow.
I submit this as evidence that, being as we are immersed in the
runup to both Easter and Passover and thus in one of the holiest
weeks of the year, the Big Guy is just reminding us all who's
really in charge.
In light of the recent unpleasant weather in the Carolinas, where
2/3 of the immediate Bollman clan is vacationing right now, I
shall resist calling them out on their convenient absence from
Michigan during this fluctuation. But I'm taking careful
notes.
M-->
12 April 02011: Where To Begin?
Sometimes it's not easy. There's so much wrong with this news
item that I can't decide where to start. From the
article itself:
Seattle school
renames Easter eggs 'Spring Spheres'
Really.
Political correctness trumps mathematical correctness. Would
it have been too much, as long as we're destroying common sense in
the service of...nothing, really--to call these treats "spring
ovoids" or "spring ellipsoids"?
Both terms would be a better description of the shape of the
container. Neither one should be necessary.
I appreciate that the student volunteer who caused this flurry of
crazy wants to keep the school's name out of the press, but I'd
really like to be able to identify them for the mocking they so
richly deserve.
M-->
29
March
02011: Convergence
Sometimes my lines of thought wind up converging in ways that
surprise me. Case in point: There's a nascent secessionist
movement going on out West right now, where some officials
in the southern part of Arizona want to break away from the north
(and its fanatical right-wing ways, they would say) and form a new
state, possibly to be called Baja Arizona.
While it's safe to call this an extreme longshot, I find myself
drawn to it for a variety of reasons:
1. A new US flag.
I've mentioned this before (The Markives, 21 August 02009
[scroll down from here]).
2. Some interesting postal play.
The Post Office abbreviation for Baja Arizona would, in all
likelihood, be BA. This connects to last Thursday's post,
and so we have Las Vegas observation #4: Having successfully
photographed the entire
alphabet in the signs of Las Vegas in 02007, I was casting
about for a new photo challenge for this trip. While the 676
possible two-letter combinations would certainly have been a
challenge, I'm reasonably certain that that would have been on the
far far side of achievable. Not for lack of looking, but I
have yet to find, say, a "QQ" out there.
While sitting in the Denver airport and pondering this issue, I
hit upon two-letter USPS state abbreviations. That was
sufficiently complex to be challenging and yet still within range
of the possible. There would, I realized, be some tricky
abbreviations (NJ, for example), but it seemed like an interesting
quest. Over the next week, I tracked down 41 of the 50
states* among the signs of the city. As for the 9 holdouts,
I took some pictures of individual letters and will be working on
merging them together into placeholder photos until they too
eventually fall before my Nikon on a future trip.
BA would be easy to pick up--at Bally's,
for example, or Mandalay
Bay. Another reason to approve, although perhaps not a
widely-shared one.
M-->
*--And a territory or two.
24
March
02011 (Happy 10th!): Vegas 13 Aftermath
A couple of observations on our latest runaway to southern Nevada
(This may become Part 1 of a short series):
1. A new form of either street performing or panhandling out in LV
is the person who dresses up as some famous person or fictional
character and attempts to garner tips for photographs with
passersby. Over spring break, I saw several Michael
Jacksons, a collection of Elvii, a Hello Kitty, a Buzz Lightyear,
and some poor soul who was dressed as the "Welcome
To Las Vegas" sign, among others.
I don't view this as a viable career option, but one morning,
while passing through an unnamed Strip casino, I was approached by
a woman who noted my resemblance to Zach Galifianakis' character
in The Hangover and
asked if she could take a photo with me. Being a reasonable
sort, I agreed--and now my picture is in two different collections
of strangers' travel photos. The other is a shot in full
kilt formal wear, taken in Scotland when Laurie and I were walking
back from Dan & Anne's wedding. The photographer in
question, who never contacted us directly, seemed excited about
the notion of seeing someone in actual Scottish regalia.
That having been said, the bobblehead of that character on sale in
at least one gift shop didn't look enough like me to be worth the
investment.
2. Speaking of panhandlers, a twist on the folks asking for spare
change on the street, in and among all the homeless veterans and
other down-on-their-luck folks, is the subspecies whose signs
simply read "Why lie? I need beer!"
I find this neither amusing nor moving.
3. Comedian Allan Havey
had some sharp words directed toward me--in extremely good fun, of
course--on this trip. It's a risk you assume when you're
seated near the front in a comedy club. I got the standard
"What do you do?" question, and responded "I'm a
mathematician." A few comments about card counting later, he
went for the kill: "This guy--he was probably the smartest kid in
class all through school, and he still has all his hair. I
hate him."
Pretty funny, actually.
M-->
2 March 02011: Still Here, Really
In response to a number of inquiries (A number greater than
1? Maybe.), yes, this site is still up and running.
Life has diverted my energies recently.
But with the recent death of Jane Russell, I find myself motivated
to comment. Specifically: Jane Russell was still
alive?
Seriously, if asked, I would have guessed that she had passed away
years ago.
There is, to my mind, a need for some kind of "Who's Not Dead
Yet?" resource. Abe
Vigoda's status is carefully tracked, of course, but that's
not enough. Here's an opportunity for a Web-savvy public
servant.
M-->
1
February 02011: Waiting For The Storm Of The Century Of The Week
No real snow out here yet, but to hear the news coverage, you'd
think there was nothing else going on in the world today.
Fresh from being closed last Friday because 200 students had the flu
or flu-like symptoms, my employer is currently holding to the "we're
a residential college, so we're not canceling classes" line.
As it should.
Individual classes may be canceled because of faculty travel
concerns, but I've already told my students that I have skis and I'm
not afraid to use them.
And so we wait.
M-->
18 January 02011: Hail Ophiuchus!
or My Sign? Neon!
I was intending to ignore the whole revision of the superstitious
nonsense that is astrology that broke in the news last week, but
it appears that a reader of this site was wondering when I'd get
to it. When you have so few readers, you can afford to take
requests like that. So here goes.
My credentials to address this vital issue--such as they are
needed--are these. Prior to 02011, I had done the following:
1. Pronounced "Ophiuchus" correctly without
laughing--and meant it.
2. Knew that Ophiuchus existed and lay on the
zodiacal band in the sky.
3. Actually saw that constellation.
I, as you might expect, view this as yet another dent in that
ultimate pseudoscience. As I quoted on 9-10 August 02005, and
again in the words of the late, great Douglas Adams:
Surely the notion that great lumps
of rock whirling in space knew something about your day must
take a bit of a
knock from the fact that
there was suddenly a new lump of rock out there that nobody had
known about before.
--Mostly
Harmless, p. 28.
While it cannot be stated enough
that the discovery that triggered all of this wasted effort was
genuine astronomy and not astrology, and thus only tangentially
related to mindless mumbo-jumbo*, this line of reasoning applies
equally well to the notion that there's a thirteenth artificial
configuration of stars knowing something about your day. Not
that this will matter a bit to astrology fans, but the conclusion
follows quickly. Back to Doug, from the same page in MH, and speaking on the
discovery of a tenth planet:
Wouldn't now perhaps be a good
time to own up that [astrology] was all a load of hogwash and
instead take up pig farming, the
principles of which were founded on some kind of rational basis?
Works for me. For my money, this
chart makes just as much sense, and has the added value of
being entertaining.
On the other hand, one positive thing that must be said about this
madness is that it was something else in the news last week other
than the plethora o' talking heads trying to find something to say
about the Tucson shooting. The news ran out on
that early, but people couldn't leave it alone.
Oh, and by the way, anyone who's rethinking their compatibility with
their mate based on this silliness really needs a new hobby. I
shall follow in Dan's footsteps (Monday Moanin', 12/18/06) by offering to front said
person the cost of a new woodburning tool.
M-->
*--On the other hand, it's as much public play as
astronomy has gotten in quite some time, and that's not a bad
thing.
11 January 02011: Holiday Wrapup
Here's one of my more interesting pictures from Christmas 02010:
Of course, many of you will
already have seen a version of this picture, as this one, taken
just after it, indicates:
M-->
11 January 02011: Heidi Redux--A
Tale For 1/11
I don't know if this affected anyone else, but very early this
morning (so the clock had rolled past midnight), I was watching
the end of the BCS Championship game. The Auburn kicker
lined up, the ball was snapped, the kick went up...
and then an Emergency Alert System test started. Following
the black screen and attention tones, the system switched me to
the designated alert channel, which is, of course, the Home
Shopping Network.
Click the photo to return to the Bollman
family main page.
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