The Markives for 02020



22 December 02020: Labor Report

Despite spending a lot of time this past quarter confined (by choice, mainly) to Calhoun County, I have nonetheless logged a lot of miles up and down I-94.  Along which byway I have seen a lot of billboards for different cannabis businesses.

Rather a lot of them, in fact.

Which leads me to a question, since none of these places were things 2 years ago:

What were all of their employees doing before marijuana was legalized in Michigan, and who's doing it now?

I mean, it's not like every cannabis worker could have been plucked from the ranks of video stores.

(Fun fact: While I was polishing this entry, the Hawaiian radio station I listen to at work had its programming interrupted for a "local" commercial, that was for a cannabis dispensary located in...Reno and Carson City, Nevada.  The 21st century is an amazing and occasionally puzzling thing.)

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15 December 02020 (Happy birthday!): A Joyous Fonighm To All, And To All A Good Day

This came in the morning's email from Politico's London Playbook

CHRISTMAS WOBBLE: Downing Street faces difficult questions this morning over its plan to relax coronavirus restrictions for a five-day period over Christmas, as a surge in cases in London and the south east and a new strain of the virus raise the specter of a third wave. Playbook really doesn’t want to be a Grinch and talk down everyone’s chances of seeing their families, but this is where the conversation is heading as the capital goes into Tier 3 tonight, just eight days before the festival of nationwide inter-generational household mixing is supposed to get underway. Boris Johnson has been absolutely determined to allow families some brief semblance of normality — but that position is going to come under intense scrutiny in the coming days.

I highlight this because calling Christmas "the festival of nationwide inter-generational household mixing" is at once about as sterile a description of any holiday as one might reasonably hope for and an amusing commentary on 02020.

Tragically, "fonighm" isn't likely to catch on as an acronym*, although it's appropriate that it looks ever-so-vaguely Welsh.  Or at least Welsh-adjacent.  Cornish (RIP), maybe.

Bravo, London.

M--> (who would ordinarily favor some holiday chaos but recognizes that it's highly unlikely for all of the usual and some of the unusual reasons)

*--Okay, maybe it will with me.



11 December 02020: Addendum for Advent

Steve from Allen Park, MI sends along the following:

You can’t really hate covers until you’ve heard the Carly Rae Jepsen version of Last Christmas.



Maybe there should be a different list of Christmas covers we don’t need. Like anyone other than Jose Feliciano doing Feliz Navidad.

That would be a very long list. 

A very.  long.  list.

All the Jose-free versions of FN is a good start.  Any version of LC that is without Wham! also qualifies.  Many holiday classics are that way because of definitive versions that should be left alone.   Indeed, one could get off to an excellent start simply by looking at this graph and saying "No more remakes of any of these songs.  Especially The Little Drummer Boy*".



I've railed against remakes rather a bit in the ACME/AVMX series; it's always worth reinforcing the "Write (or record) something new, people!" mantra.  In the case of Carly Rae Jepsen, though, it's especially disappointing to see a remake, since she's also got a nifty new tune out this year: "It's Not Christmas Till Somebody Cries".





Consider this an extra to AVMX-11, bringing us to 111 songs in total.

And that's beautiful.  Just beautiful.

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*--I'm still alive in this year's LDB Challenge.



10 December 02020: ACME-17/AVMX-11–The Good Eleven(th)

That would refer to the place in line of this year's list of unjustly overlooked holiday tunes*, not the length of the list, which remains fixed at the standard-since-02014 length of 10 songs.  (While that’s a YouTube hyperlink, TGE is most assuredly not a holiday tune.)

Observation: In assembling these annual lists, I typically work from notes put together as much as a year earlier, without giving much thought to the sound of the songs.  When I pulled the audio tracks all together**, I was struck as to how incredibly variable these sounds of the season turned out to be.  Holiday radio tends to be more jarring than other formats in its transitions, but this year turned out to be very eclectic.

Which is probably a good thing.
 
1. To Christmas! (The Drinking Song), Straight No Chaser. The a cappella crew makes its 4th appearance, tying the Trans-Siberian Orchestra, as it kicks off this year's decet.  “What the holidays need is a drinking song in the form of a countdown” has not been thought often enough, perhaps, but it’s good that these guys did.  Commendably, they did not take the 99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall route and sing out all of the days in the countdown.

And a reference in song to New Year’s Eve is always welcome ‘round these parts.

2. I Want An Elephant For Christmas, The Caroleers. Because anyone*** can ask for a hippopotamus.  This one’s a bit more creative in the large-animal-as-gift category.  It comes from the Santa Claus Is Coming To Town album, which seems to have some potential for future editions of this list.

3. Christmas All Over Again, Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers. One from the “mainstream artists recording their own Christmas music rather than going the remake route”.  This needs to be encouraged. Say what you will about "Last Christmas" and "Whamageddon", the rush to avoid it each year--but George and Andy at least had the decency to record something new.

4. It’s Christmas Once Again In San Francisco, Barry De Vorzon.  The geography lesson embedded in these lists moves to the Bay Area.  This seems a bit more country-twangy than one might expect from SF, or even San Jose or Oakland.

5. The Season's Upon Us, Dropkick Murphys.  The group's name involves the word "Dropkick", and the album is called Signed and Sealed in Blood.  Surely fun is not far off, one thinks.

One would be correct.  The video is also kind of amusing.

Something I only noticed late in the writing game: This is the only song in this year's edition of AVMX that doesn't have the word "Christmas" in its title.  Interesting, and completely unintentional, but it's the first list with such a heavy ration of songs that state their 25 December intent up front.

6. Green Christmas, Barenaked Ladies.  The comes from the soundtrack to the movie The Grinch, which some say should have remained animated.

7. Christmas (Comes But Once A Year), Amos Milburn.  Follow me here:

    Entry #6 causes one to think of Stan Freberg's Green Chri$tma$, which is at once a comedy Christmas classic and ineligible for inclusion on these lists by virtue of not being (comparatively) obscure.
    A song within that sketch uses the title of this 01960 song as a recurrent phrase, if not, perhaps, a title.
    Which makes for a nice connection between #6 and #7.
    And AVMX tries to include one "gone too long" tune per year.

That adds up to justification on multiple fronts.  Enjoy.

8. Moonbows For Christmas, Amy Hanaiali`i Gilliom.  Speaking of green Christmases, here’s a song from Hawaii.  With Colbie Caillat and Imua, that's a hat trick of Hawaiian tunes beyond MK that have been racked up here.

Fun fact; The concept of a moonbow goes back at least as far as Aristotle.

Less fun fact: Moonbows are typically so faint that the human eye cannot make out the colors.  To the vast majority of us, they're all-white.  Long-exposure photography makes the colors visible.

9. A Willie Nice Christmas, Kacey Musgraves f/ Willie Nelson. In a season where the nation seems to be getting much more liberal, for better or worse, about marijuana****, the time is not far from right for this.  Lyrics like “leave some special cookies out for Santa” admit to a less nefarious interpretation, but I’m not sure anyone can put a drug-free spin on “may we all stay higher than the angel on top of the tree”.

10. Christmas Tips, Richard Kind.  Parody is layered on top of parody in this one--which means it's very much at home in AVMX.  Another in the "Christmas Tunes from Unlikely Places" file, this one was written by John Mulaney for the Documentary Now! TV series and sung by a terrific character actor (Mad About You, Spin City, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Red Oaks, Married--and the list goes on).  CT comes from the "cast album" of Co-Op.

The cast album took 24 hours to record, if the album cover is to be believed.  (A big "if", I'll admit.)

The show ran for one night, also according to the album cover.

It's nice that we have a show relic in this paean to holiday gratuities, sung by a doorman.

Io Saturnalia!

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*–All eleven (in reverse order)  may be found here, of course.
**--I have all 110 songs on a flash drive.  My memory game is to hit "shuffle" on that when I'm driving and try to name the 110th song to be played, which is a challenge that typically runs over several days.  I'm 1 for 1 this year.
***–Anyone can, but most people really shouldn't, though, including Kacey Musgraves and  LeAnn Rimes (The Markives, 26 December 02018).  Also, to be honest, anyone over the age of 12.
****--Pardon me.  Cannabis.



9 December 02020 (Happy birthday!): Avoiding The Obvious

Dan from East Lansing, MI was quick to alert me to this bit from The Guardian on the latest development from the Olympics: that breakdancing (Pardon me.  "Breaking".) will be added to the Games menu in 02024, thus stretching the meaning of "game" that much further toward its breaking point.

Which seems curious and curiously appropriate.

So I learned that breakdancing is still apparently a thing among youth, which was a mild surprise.

There's enough obvious mockery out there that I'm going another way.  This is an opportunity to strike a blow for both sports and arts.  The original Olympics were a cultural festival that included such things as choral singing alongside the sports.  It's time to revive that--by moving all of the judged exhibitions to a separate festival.

And we sit at the perfect moment in time to pull that off.  The 02020 Summer Games got moved to 02021 because, well, you know.  Let's use this as a springboard: In 02025, and every 4 years thereafter, there should be an Olympics of Judged Exhibitions (there's a better name out there [Spring Olympics?], and someone will surely find it).  Figure skating, ice dancing, gymnastics (artistic and rhythmic), synchronized swimming & diving, trampolining, etc.--all the judged stuff--could move to this exhibition Games and meet up with breakdancing.  "Dancesport", which is the name for competitive ballroom dancing as it's tried to get under the rings, could be folded in.

The TV ratings would doubtless be great--figure skating and gymnastics are, after all, where a lot of viewer eyes are to be found in Olympic years.  The sports fans would have a better time in the even-numbered years.  It would leave some room for some actual sports who have been parked on the outside for years--including but not limited to squash, which was a focus of that Guardian article.  Everyone wins.

Make it happen, IOC.

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2 December 02020: Life Imitating Art--Not

In the Odyssey Quartet (2001, 2010, 2061, and 3001), the monoliths were of alien origin and were intended as a catalyst of intelligence.

The prisms in Utah and Romania are neither.  Indeed, given some of the reports out there, one might regard these structures as inhibitors of intelligence (Today I learned that "inhibitor" is the official antonym of "catalyst").  The fact that blood was found on the Utah prism makes one wonder.  A lot.

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30 November 02020: Prelude to ACME-17/AVMX-11

Back in 02011, when I put up the second collection of underheard holiday tunes, I included Simon & Garfunkel's 7:00 News/Silent Night. I suggested that this could be re-recorded each year with the news segment updated for the times, and opined that "This could be a (depressing) annual tradition.  That of course, is only sort of a good thing."

Someone has done it: In what might be the most suitable of all recent years to remake this combination, Phoebe Bridgers has looped Fiona Apple and Matt Berninger into collaborating on an update.  Experience it here (it's hard to say "Enjoy" as the verb there.).

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30 November 02020: Non-Travel Notes With Another Month Down

And so we continue in the quest for the new normal.


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21 November 02020 (25 years later): Observation on a Quarter-Century

It's been a good bonus.

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20 November 02020: Note To The Next Generation

I hope you're taking careful notice of the political madness that's going on right now, because it will be your privilege to explain it all to the generation that follows you, who will not believe what they read in the history books (whatever "book" may mean by the time 02045 rolls around, of course) about 02020.

At least I hope that things revert to something more sensible so that they won't believe it all.

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16 November 02020 (Happy birthday yesterday and tomorrow!): Very Slightly Ahead of the Crowd

So my employer was a couple of days ahead of the governor, and we're almost all-online starting today.

The one very minor silver lining in all of this (online courses at double speed is something else that professor school did not prepare me for) is that my looming case of "mask beard" is probably going to subside.  That's like "hat hair", but more amusing.

It helped that I was so isolated yesterday that I never needed to put on a mask.

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10 November 02020 (Happy anniversary!): A Start Toward Balance

My email file of American frustration (The Markives, 2 October 02019) hit 2990 as Election Day dawned last week--up over 1300 emails (> 3 more per day, and that's with checks against duplication in place) since we checked in last year.  It's gotten a bit bigger in the week since then.

Under the heading of "I should have done this a long time ago", I started up a new folder on 1 November for encouraging emailed news about the country.  It's at 9 right now.

The race is on.

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4 November 02020*, 1030 AM EST: Quote O' The Day, Amid Sunrise, Green Grass, And Uncertainty

As an occasional dabbler in statistics, I found this of interest during the current wait:

A key question moving forward is whether public opinion polling is irreparably broken
or if polling is just broken in elections with Trump on the ballot.
Nathan Gonzales of Inside Elections.

Food for thought, though perhaps difficult to study.

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*--Also known as "The Morning After The Night Before", with apologies to Shelley B.



3 November 02020: A Curious Mixture of Dread and Hope, Though Perhaps Not in Equal Proportion


The sun will, with very high probability, rise tomorrow morning.  Also, most--perhaps all--of us reading this will still be on the green side of the grass then.

Anything after that is a bonus.

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2 November 02020 (In the homestretch of The Most Important Election Of Our Lives This YearTM): Tune For Tuesday

I'm loading this up today because I want to be able to access this song from the moment I get to work tomorrow:  From the Capitol Steps:

The Hallelujah, It's Over, Chorus

Admittedly, it's from 01996, but the overarching sentiment at the beginning is perhaps even more applicable today than it was then.

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30 October 02020: Where Have You Gone, Simon Bond? A Nation Turns Its Lonely Eyes To You*

Simon, is, of course, the author of that seminal text 101 Uses for a Dead Cat, something that the world seems to need.

So this happened today: I was talking about calculus, as I often do, and mentioned that while products of powers of trig functions are relatively uncommon in the wild, right triangles are not.  Indeed, I said, there are places where you can't swing a dead cat without hitting a right triangle.

Now, one thing about masks is that they make it very difficult to read the audience.  Even with fabric barriers, though, I could tell that the students (there were only 5 of them in class, so it was easy to do a census rather than a sample) weren't sure how serious I was, nor how they ought to respond to that possible violation of a deceased feline carcass.

On some questioning, it turned out that none of them had ever heard the phrase "can't swing a dead cat without..." before.

And so my efforts to educate the youth of America took an odd left turn. I also told them to ask their parents--and grandparents, if necessary--to confirm that I was not pulling that phrase out of nowhere.

(By the way, I have never swung a dead cat, although I did once put a bit of a spin on a dead squirrel while removing it from inside my house.)

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*--Apologies to Paul and Arthur.



15 October 02020*: An Alternate Programming Suggestion

If I'm Joe Biden**, my outline for tonight's televised town hall looks something like this:

Camera opens on a shot of BIDEN seated in an easy chair.  A large television set is in the background.

BIDEN: My fellow Americans, good evening.  Let's all watch the President self-destruct together, shall we?

BIDEN turns on the TV, which is tuned to a station showing the President's town hall.  The show runs its course.

BIDEN: Thank you, and good night.

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*--19 days until The Most Important Election Of Our Lives This YearTM.  (I voted today, so I'm done with it all.)
**--I am not.  This sort of thinking may be why.



8 October 02020 (Happy birthday yesterday!), 1109 AM EDT: Rapid Response

I haven't seen anyone else say this yet, though I am sure that someone has:

When the top story out of your debate is an insect, nothing happened.

Even allowing for the monumentally low expectations by which any Vice-Presidential debate is judged*, one may safely say that those of us who tuned out last night missed nothing.

Carry on, America.

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*--The only reason why this one might have been more than homeopathically interesting (Spoiler alert: It wasn't.) was as a preview of a possible 02024 Presidential debate.



24 September 02020*: Current Events Intrude

There are several options for fixing Presidential elections that aren't going to happen anytime soon.  Thoughtful readers may want to reflect on why that is.

1. Abolish the Electoral College and elect Presidents by popular vote.

Involves amending the Constitution, which is a nonstarter.  Too many people are afraid of the "disenfranchising the small states" theory, and very few are concerned about "only a handful of swing states really matter" when electing a President.  (As a resident of one of those states, I wouldn't mind mattering a bit less if it'd cut down on the TV ads.)

2. Abolish the electors, but keep the Electoral College.  Electoral votes are automatically awarded without the anitclimax stretching through December and January.

Solves the whole "faithless electors" issue.  Still involves Constitutional amendment, but less radically so.  Still a nonstarter.

3. It seems like there'd be a stronger case for leaving things alone if the system's contradiction occasionally produced a stellar leader.

I was kind of intrigued by this list of Presidents who lost the popular vote but won the electoral vote.

Five names, not a gem among them.  Three of the five were either sons or grandsons of former Presidents**, which might be more than an entertaining coincidence.

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Unrelated: Can we, as a country, disabuse ourselves of the notion that electoral concessions matter?  I've seen way too many pixels spilt on this idea lately.

Conceding an election has no bearing on the outcome--rather the opposite--and if someone concedes an election but is later found to have the most votes, s/he wins anyway.

Also unrelated: I don't think that the Constitution provides for someone's dying wish about her/his successor to be considered in the judicial appointment process.

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*--Fun (well, maybe only sort of) fact: Though I live less than an hour's walk from a county line, I have not left Calhoun County since before Labor Day.  This is an accidental side effect of Laurie moving back to Albion, I suppose, but I still need to put an end to that streak.
**--That is, every President who was the son or grandson of a former President got into office by losing the popular vote and winning in the Electoral College.  Hmmm.



8 September 02020 (Happy anniversary!): Reflective Reactions*

1. Somewhere in the USA right now, there lives the last American who will die of a coronavirus infection before a vaccine is available.

I'm hoping very hard not to be that person.  My most recent negative test was last Tuesday.

2. It's time to bring another word** from Paul Dickson's Words book into heavier circulation: To wit:

zisterous (adj.): Relating to reform that will be of the greatest benefit to the reformer.

The inspiration for this word was one Barry Zister, who, as Connecticut Consumer Counsel, tried to persuade phone companies to print their directories alphabetically backward every other year in order to offset the perceived competitive advantage of being first.  While we may all agree that that is something of a moot point these days, there is nonetheless zisterous behavior afoot, if one looks closely.  The example that caught my attention recently was Mississippi head football coach Lane Kiffin, who has advocated for NCAA football players whose colleges or conferences have postponed or canceled their seasons being granted the right to transfer to other schools and play immediately.

I doubt that he's motivated primarily by concern for athletes, and I doubt that the University of Alabama or LSU would be adding too many gridiron refugees from the Midwest or West Coast.

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*--This sounds a little more Merchant Ivoryesque than "Reactionary Reflections", which was also considered as a title.
**--Following nephice, anthonize, and gourmet parent.  There's probably one or two others that I've adopted in my daily speech and just not written about here yet.



24 August 02020 (4 negative C-19 tests so far): Calendar Check

Today is evidently "International Strange Music Day".

I have a feeling that the United Nations was not involved in deciding this.

It's also my 52nd first day of school*, and I'm still no better at handling them than I was at #1.  It probably doesn't help that my only class in this first half of a split semester isn't until 7:00 tonight, so there's a lot of waiting so far today.

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*--Fun fact: Those 52 first days are in 7 different decades.  I expect to get one more before I'm through.



17 August 02020: The Countup Continues

Marvin Aday was off by a bit.  It turns out that one out of two is what really ain't bad.

Here's something that Laurie and I realized this weekend: It's been over 11 years since the two of us were living together and both employed full-time.  In the abstract, that doesn't seem like too much to ask of the universe.  Reality has its own ambitions, though.

Recent and upcoming developments won't bring an end to this streak.  Whatever our "new normal" turns out to be, odds are that it won't be both new and normal at the same time.

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10 August 02020: Knock Knock!  Who's There?  Opportunity!

If the current trends play out to their conclusion, what a great gift for college athletes all over America this will be: A semester free of competition, so that they might concentrate on their studies without quite so much distraction.

Surely football players all across the land are welcoming this opportunity to study.  Freshmen are going to be able to adjust to college academics right away and then shift into sports mode when the games return.

Of course, that's just me.  I could be completely mistaken*.

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*--Tip o' the visor to Dennis Miller for that closing.



29 July 02020 (Happy anniversary*!): News Roundup

Obituaries: Celebrity Deathwatch: Regis Philbin 11, Olivia de Havilland 2.

I can't really quibble with the winner of this forced matchup, but I kind of feel like the margin of victory should have been smaller.

Sports: In and around the Seattle Kraken and Charlotte FC announcing their names and the Washington Football Team introducing a stopgap moniker, last Thursday was a big day in nicknaming.
Entertainment: After way too much thinking, there are two Emile Arturi Award winners this year.  Will & Grace, which was predictable and also the show's second win (the Statue of Liberty sequence clinched it), and Modern Family.

MF's final episode was a strong argument for 45 minutes of closing material and 15 minutes of clips as a sendoff.  The show did very well wrapping up in-progress storylines, but there wasn't enough material to fill out a full hour, and so we endured the dog video sequence and the figure skating trophy material.  I admit to having overthought this for a couple of months; my last re-viewing settled the matter.  It may well turn out to be that MF is the line dividing winners from non-winners going forward--the decision was that close.

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*--The 55th anniversary of Medicare, of course.  Also the 25th anniversary of something much more important.



20 July 02020 (Happy birthday yesterday and today!): Observations From Plan C

1. It's vaguely amusing to be in a moderately-sized crowd when everyone gets the same text message at once, as happened to us last Monday at 4:44 PM when the governor's updated mask order came down.  Lots of chirping, buzzing, and beeping, all at once.

2. Northern Michigan has an interesting brand of resistance to masks.  Some of it is surely based in right-wing thinking, some in a general independence of spirit that prevails up that way, and some, certainly, in a bit of resentment at official regression--since that part o' the state was doing better than the southern sector in controlling Covid-19.

3. This coin shortage is getting more amusing by the day.  Corollary: If something is served in a waffle cone, you shouldn't be paying for it with a credit card.

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10 July 02020 (Happy birthday!): A Sporting Observation

As someone who follows sports team nicknames more than is usual or healthy, the whole escalation of the NFL Washington franchise's nickname has caught my attention.  For better or worse, this includes reading I'net comment sections where people who think they're funny propose alternate nicknames.

Whatever the new nickname is, I feel confident is saying it's not going to be anything even remotely satirical.

That may be a bad thing, but it'll almost certainly be a more reasonable nickname.

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8 July 02020 (Happy birthday!): Nephice-Adjacent News

1. I am quite certain that none of my nephices know anything about my involvement with the SAT, and I don't see that information ever reaching them, so that won't be showing up in a tell-all book in the 02040s.

2. New Mexico is a wonderful state, but even I don't want to spend 14 days quarantined there.  Today would have been the beginning of that.  So we canceled our vacation Plan B last week.  Plan C starts Monday, if all goes well.  How this affects nephice Xmas presents will be determined on the road somewhere.

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2 July 02020 (Happy birthday!): Celebrity Deathwatch: Over-90 Division

Carl Reiner: 9 breaking news emails.  (This is the best online obituary I've seen.  This and that tie for second.)

Hugh Downs: 4.

In the steel-cage death match between nonagenarians, youth (98) triumphs over experience (99).

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24 June 02020: What Was Fourth On That List?

The Battle Creek Public Schools are running some radio ads around here to alert parents to upcoming kindergarten registration.    Three young children (or actors portraying them) are extolling the exciting times of kindergarten.  The first two are reasonable enough: "We get to play outside." and "We get to go on field trips.".  The third:

"We get to spell words!"

Gotta be honest, I'm not sure how that's a draw.

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23 June 02020: Notes From A War(m) Zone

In the ongoing drama that is the temperature in my office, we hit 96.5° this morning.  My desk and chair were hot to the touch when I got here.   The hallway temperature is currently 92.8°, so it's not like I've really got an effective heat sink to assist in cooling things down toward bearable.  My office windows a) do not open, and b) look out onto an enclosed atrium that is also quite steamy these days.

The days of "Will it really break 90 in here?" seem like eons ago.

On another front: In my email yesterday, my daily paper from Academia.com was  "International standards for the assessment of the risk of thermal strain on clothed workers in hot environments".

I know some people who should read this.

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18 June 02020: Pandemic Economics For $1200

Alex Trebek: The value of an essential worker in Silver City, New Mexico.

Me: What is 37½¢?

A.T.: Correct!

Why do I know this?

Laurie and I, having had our original vacation plans disrupted by Covid-19, are plotting a road trip for next month.  I found the Web site for a hotel I was considering in Silver City to be remarkably non-functional, and so was forced to deal with a human being.  In the back-and-forth that ensued, mostly me trying to reconcile the online rate with what the agent was quoting me, she asked if either Laurie or I was an essential worker.  I responded honestly, that I'm a professor and Laurie is a hospital librarian*.  These professions qualified under their definition ("Professor" doesn't always rise to that level, in my very limited experience.).

In the recalculation, our room rate dropped, by 75¢.  For 2 essential workers.

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*--Furlough does not change this fact.




2 June 02020 (Happy birthday tomorrow!): Cover Art, Part 3

Here's the cover art for book #3, for the benefit of those who don't look at the Facebook (Hi, Monica!).



Looks like we're on pace for an early fall appearance.

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28 May 02020: Scattered Thoughts On Scattered Times
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*--Odd fact: I still have that card's number memorized, but haven't committed my new D-Card number to memory, and this was about 18 years ago.



20 May 02020: Nothing Like Midland, Of Course

With the recent rains in southern Michigan, we're back to watching for backyard flooding.  This picture tells (most of) the story:



Ordinarily, the backyard here is not a swim-up facility due to the retaining wall, which here is still above water.  Upstream a bit, though, the river is above the grass, enough to let the waterfowl onto dry land without having to leap or fly.  One can see a tiny breach of the wall over to the left of the biggest goose, but they made their way over from an easier access point.

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30 April 02020: The Beginning Of The End (For Now)

So it's the end of another semester around here (senior grades were due at noon today; Virtual Commencement is Saturday).  Though I've probably accomplished more this term than most other terms since I got into this racket, it doesn't feel that way.  Chalk that up to isolation and the stresses of remote emergency teaching, which is a better name for the last 7 weeks than online teaching.  The latter involves a lot more careful planning than we had time for this year.

On a bigger scale: I have long resisted the notion that the future must inevitably be dystopian, as it is so often depicted in popular culture (The Hunger Games, Divergent, Snowpiercer [apparently], and so forth).  Bleak prospects for the coming years may make for more compelling drama, but a lot of people seem to have recently surrendered to that notion in real life.  What I also find amusing is that future dystopias frequently feature overcrowding as a big part of the problem (Terra Nova, to name another one).

Missed that one, folks.

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15 April 02020: Dispatch From An Insecure Fully-Disclosed Location

In and around all of the new regulations surrounding life in the first half of 02020, I found this one amusing: There's a geographic area that is requiring masks on anyone over 5 years old in public.  There are, of course, exceptions, and one of them is "Anyone entering a bank or credit union".  This makes a great deal of sense, which contrasts it with a lot of new rules that we're all navigating.

Reminds one of the observation that the most difficult job is bank guard in Alaska.  In the words of Dennis Miller: "You got twenty people in the joint, and they're all wearing ski masks."

This may not exactly be the bright line between reason and madness that I'm still hoping to discover as we roll with this pandemic, but perhaps one can see that line from here.

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13 April 02020 (Happy birthday!*): (The Continuing Search For) Whimsy Amidst The Madness**

I checked my credit union's online banking service today on an unrelated matter, and discovered that Laurie and I will be receiving our stimulus check via direct deposit on...April 15.

Perfect.

This has been another in the continuing saga "You couldn't make this up; it'd've seemed too farfetched to take seriously".  I like to think that some IRS functionary engineered a large wave of checks to drop in the 15th, but even if it's just the luck of the draw, it's amusing.

Back to social distancing (I keep a 6-foot ruler in my office in the very unlikely event that someone stops by and needs to be kept properly at bay) and sheltering more or less in place.

That said, if it turns out that three of the things you most like to do in life are eating in restaurants, shopping at nonessential businesses, and shaking hands, you have my sympathy.

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*--And, as always, happy half-birthday and happy one-third birthday.
**--Parenthetical in place because I'm trying to write post titles that sound like they could be Merchant Ivory films.



9 April 02020: Fourish Weeks In

I'm currently wrapping up my fourth week of teaching courses online that weren't originally supposed to be online, which means that my students are in their fourth week of taking such classes.  If there's a guide for students on how to take online classes--especially synchronous online classes where there's a camera pointed at you, I haven't seen it, and someone should write one.

Here's my contribution:
If you wouldn't do it in an in-person class, don't do it in an online class.
Specifically, and all based on experience:

I'm sure there will be other revelations to come.  Of course, only three weeks remain, so time is short unless this new order continues into the fall semester.  My summer online classes have always been asynchronous and camera-free, so these rules don't mean much in that environment.  If someone is taking statistics pants-free, there's no good way for me to know about it, and so I would not presume to object.


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25 March 02020: An Opportunity Missed, But Probably Not Lost

A few years back, I was toying with the idea of writing a book on the mathematics of sports betting, using the logic that wagering on sports was likely to be legalized nationwide, which might spark some increased interest in that brand of math.

Things moved a little too quickly for me, and I shelved that idea.  Part of the reason is that sports betting was legalized earlier than I expected, and as a result, a number of books on the subject came out more quickly than I'd've been able to write one.  Part of it is that I found another avenue for my research that wound up becoming my next book.

In light of the current sports gambling landscape, it's probably better that I didn't.  When Division II soccer in Aruba is near the top of the menu in American sports books, it's safe to say that scholarly analysis of the wagers would be far less in demand*.

Plus, I know next to nothing about Aruban soccer--though I'm willing to go there and learn.

In the meantime, I'm wrapping up the replacement for this hypothetical book, which is due to the publisher next week and which should be out around Labor Day.

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*--Not that it was starting with a huge base of interest, of course.



24 March 02020: More Random Thoughts

5. Tomorrow was supposed to be the day that my Honors students and I trekked north to the Soaring Eagle Casino.for an in-depth comparison of gaming theory and practice.

In a really amusing coincidence, it will also be the day that the last remaining open commercial casinos in America will close due to the current pandemic.  That batch of casinos is in Deadwood, SD.  They'll be shutting down at noon MDT tomorrow--which, due to the logistics of time zones, is almost exactly the time that we'd've been rolling up to the SEC.

There are still evidently 16 tribal casinos that remain open and will do so past 2 PM EDT tomorrow.  They seem to be very small slot arcades, though--possibly, one might speculate, on the order of Nevada's Moapa Paiute Travel Plaza.  I'm guessing that their fireworks shop, at a minimum, is still open.  It's convenient that they have a designated launch zone right outside--set up, of course, at an appropriately safe distance from the gas pumps.

6. This piece came out last month, before the new normal that we're going to be dealing with, one way or another, for at least the rest of 02020.  I find it to be a pretty accurate description of the President's motivations even before the pandemic.  It's certainly not less accurate now.

7. My new passport arrived in last Saturday's mail.  Perhaps someday I'll get to use it.

8. Apropos of nothing: I was watching marble racing on YouTube well before ESPN Ocho discovered it.  (I root for Red Number 3.)

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22 March 02020: Random Thoughts From An Insecure Undisclosed Location

1. It's kind of amusing to think that a gathering of the extended Clan Bollman (n = 23) would run afoul of proclamations on maximum gathering populations.

2. One way we'll know when this pandemic has breathed its last is when Lake Superior State University adds "social distancing" to its list of banished words.

3. If they take "social media" away at the same time, I, for one, would not object.

4. In and around everything that's going on (RIP x 2), I am reminded of the wise words of Melanie Chartoff*, from the ABC TV show Fridays, sometime in December 1980.  These lyrics have been updated for the first three months of 02020, and should be sung to the tune of Auld Lang Syne:

Let 2020 be forgot
And in the past be tucked.
For all of us would surely say
That 2020 sucked.

The year still has 284 days to redeem itself, but I'm not liking its chances.

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*--More likely one of Fridays' writers, but that's not something I want to try tracking down right now.



15 March 02020 (Beware!): Blindfolded And Searching In A Dark Room For A Black Cat That Isn't There

I'm sure that the University of Bologna (est. 01088) was affected by the Black Plague pandemic way back in the day.  If their faculty had left some notes about what they did to cope with that medical unpleasantness back in the mid-01300's, a lot of us who teach college students might have easier going right now.

And so the muddling through begins.

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12 March 02020: Unexpected Outbreak of Reason

The sports cancellations are starting to happen.  Live long enough, and you'll see everything.

That said, I have not yet seen everything, so I expect to be around for quite a while longer.

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11 March 02020 (Happy birthday!): Waiting On The Inevitable

I'm waiting to see the first major university with enough guts to cancel all of its upcoming athletic events for the duration of their moving classes online* in reacting to Covid-19.

I expect that I'll be waiting for quite some time.  (Update 12 March 02020: Okay, that didn't happen.)

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*--"Moving classes online" is not the simple process that some college administrators (none here, yet) seem to believe it is, by the way.




6 March 02020: Congratulations

...to everyone reading this, for you came within a mere 5 votes of tying Elizabeth Warren in the 02020 Democratic Presidential caucus in American Samoa.

All without spending a dollar campaigning or any time in that attractive overseas territory which is home to one of the least-visited national parks in the whole NPS system.

On now to the Northern Mariana Islands!

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6 March 02020: An Unexpected Discovery

On the list of industries that have been seriously damaged by the rise of technology, add "postcards".

That surprised me a little bit this past week.  While in Las Vegas on an official school function, I was looking for a particular type of postcard that Laurie wanted to send back to the Midwest*.  This proved quite challenging, with one gift shop employee blaming "all those iPhones" for the steep dropoff in postcard supply.  Not just the kind I was looking for, but pretty much anything.

There may be some merit to that claim.

I found what we were looking for in a "vintage memorabilia" bin at one of my preferred gambling supply houses, but the shortage of postcard racks in gift shops was rather unexpected.

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*--A task for which Laurie was well-prepared, having packed exactly the right number of postcard-rate stamps.  No Brazilian, she.



9 February 02020: Anyone Who Thinks That This Is Not The Best Time In Human History To Be Alive Is Wrong

Here's why: I recently got a new office computer, which required a lot of work backing up my old computer files for migration to the new machine.

This transition is not well-managed around here.  In the past, this would've meant scattering files across very full network drives, flash drives, and the odd writable CD, with the hope that nothing important would be lost.

This time around, I went out and got a 2-terabyte external hard drive, which took on everything on my computer with room to spare and in under 5 hours of copy time.

By way of context: At my previous employer, we once got two new desktop machines for the department whose hard drives had 128 megabytes of storage each.  Our reaction to that was "Why would anyone ever need that much storage?"  In our admittedly weak defense, this was before digital cameras or the World Wide Web were really very much of a thing.

My new drive is the equivalent of about 15,625 of those computers, and it fits in a shirt pocket.*

The fact that such technological wonders exist, and that fact alone**, confirms that this is clearly the right time to be alive.

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*--That size reference might have more meaning if I frequently (or even occasionally) wore shirts with pockets.  I don't recall the last time I wore a button-down shirt that wasn't a Scout uniform.  Most of my golf shirts are pocket-free.
**--There are a few other reasons, but this one is all I currently need.




2 February 02020: One Never Knows...

when certain information might be useful.  In this case, it took over 40 years.

(Disclaimer:  I'm writing this entry entirely from memory.  I don't know what's on the I'net about this material, nor do I want to check before this joins it.)

Back in the late 01970s, ABC broadcast a short-lived TV show called Almost Anything Goes! which featured competition in a variety of odd stunts from teams representing small towns (approximate population 7000-12,000ish) around the USA.  Charlie Jones and Lynn Shackleford were the announcers, and Regis Philbin joined them at some point.  Among the cities competing were Burrillville, RI, Culpeper, VA, Mariana, FL, Banning, CA, and Boulder City, NV.  The Alabama State Championship in season 2 saw teams from Andalusia, Brewton, and Opp face off.

Also on that list was Hammond, Louisiana.  It somehow stuck in my teenage brain, from the broadcast, that the town was host to an annual strawberry festival.  The team might have been nicknamed the "Strawberries", and the events may have been held in Strawberry Stadium--I am less sure about those details.

Okay, so there's a lot of clutter in my memory.  This has long been the case.  Yesterday, though, I was interviewing prospective students for Albion's* Honors Program, and one of the five students I spoke with was from Hammond.  My first question to him was "Is the strawberry festival still a thing down there?"

He was, to put it mildly, very impressed that I'd heard of Strawberry Fest.  One might even say blown away.  I didn't go into the details of why I know that--no sense in scaring off good students--but he's got a good tale for the folks back home about his trip north.

If he enrolls here, I think I deserve a finder's fee.

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*--Side note: One other thing that sticks in my memory about AAG is a letter to the Detroit Free Press "Action Line" column asking if the show would ever tape an episode in Michigan.  This person wanted to compete, and ended their letter with the line "What's my first move?".  AL's reply started out with "To someplace like Albion or Sturgis.", which connects up nicely to the home of The Markives.



27 January 02020: Back In Advance

With the appropriate and necessary word changes presumed, I think it's time to bring this back.  From 02009:




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16 January 02020: News Of Numismatics

While I was checking out at a convenience store this morning, the cashier asked me if I'd be okay receiving a $1 coin among my change.

The answer to that question shall always be "Yes".  (I'd've hoped for an Eisenhower coin*, but these were the more recent "golden dollars".)

In the brief chat that followed, it turned out that she had a bunch of those in her cash drawer, really didn't like them, and hoped to get rid of them as soon as possible

So I offered to buy her out, and walked with 6 more coins.

These 7 coins are at once a reminder of the failure of the U.S. government to support the good idea that is a $1 coin by pulling $1 bills from circulation at the same time** and an example of how sometimes it's very easy to make someone's day better with very little effort.

The ones that don't land in my collection (there are several new-to-me Presidential dollars in the stack) are probably going to Las Vegas next month.  Dollar coins are very useful for tipping casino beverage servers.

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*--I have three of those on my desk, including one that's gold-plated, for use in class. A  coin-flipping exercise lands better when the coin is large and very visible.
**--See Canada for an example of how this works.



13 January 02020: Despite The Revolution

While we fought a war to get away from these people, I am nonetheless drawn ever so slightly into an observation on the current madness among the British royal family.

And I find myself siding with Prince Harry on this one.

The man is #6 in line to the throne, which means we're not going to see King Henry IX unless there's a spectacularly massive cataclysm.  For which I do not for a moment wish, nor, I am sure, does he.

That understood, it makes a lot of sense to me that the obligations of royalty are being laden upon him with no real potential of even a brief taste of the perks of the top job.  If that means that he wants to trade some of the money for a relaxation of his duties...well, I can't argue against that.

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8 January 02020: What is "Tahiti Graffiti Treaty"?

It's evidence that the writing staff for Jeopardy! are having some fun working up the answers for the current Greatest of All Time tournament.

Also on that list: "What is The Facts of Life, the Universe, and Everything bagel?"

I haven't heard the first match yet, though my trivia team and I watched most of it on a big screen with the sound off last night.  Lip-reading the contestants was at times less tricky than one might initially fear, although it certainly helps if you have the correct answer and are just reading for confirmation.

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2 January 02020: Time Passages, Part 3

In hearing about David Stern and Don Larsen's deaths yesterday, I wondered, as I do when hearing about deaths that occur on 1 January, if they realized that they had made it to the new year.

I always hope that people in this circumstance did, in part because I like the notion of a "final accomplishment" at the end  I also like the fact that dying on 1 January messes up easy age calculations.  On a return visit, here's xkcd, this time from 30 December 02019:

New
            Year's Eve

As someone whose age via subtraction is subject to off-by-one errors 363 days out of 365*, I approve of this kind of celebration.

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*--364 out of 366 this year, of course.



2 January 02020 (Where's the Sealab?): On Marking Time

One thing that seemed way too overblown this New Year's Eve, and way more overblown that it was 10 years ago, was the chorus of pedants arguing that 02020* doesn't really mark the start of a new decade.

Yes, it's true that if we're measuring from 00001 C.E., there's a year yet to go before a "new" decade starts.  There's something different going on here.

Speaking of the 02010s as a decade simply means the set of 10 years of the form 0201x, as x runs from 0 through 9.  That's not the same as the 202nd decade of the common era.

Once again, xkcd nailed this one:

I Love the
          20s

Would that many other disputes could be so easily settled**.

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*--If you're Y10K compatible and type the way I do, this year is kind of fun to type.  Not unlike the word "blackjack", which I type more than is usual.
**--By reasoned thinking, that is, not by appeal to VH1.



2 January 02020 (Happy New Year!): Introducing Living The Circuit

One thing I've been thinking about recently is the idea of "living the circuit", which is my term for successfully living in each of the 10 decades from the 00s through to the 90s--though not necessarily in that order, of course.  Where you start matters.  This connects to a brief discussion some of us had at Christmas last year about how many decades we've been alive in.  (Why we were talking about that escapes me a little.)

Everybody born in the 01930s just completed the circuit yesterday, and good on them.

I've been toying with connecting this up with another coinage I premiered on The Markives a few years back and issuing an edict to the following effect*:

If you have lived the circuit, you're allowed to bite the holly.

While I still object strongly enough to early holiday intrusion not to go there, I admit that it rolls well off the tongue.

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*--Credit for this idea goes in part to Patton Oswalt, who has spoken on the notion of new rights accruing to people as they age.



Previous editions of The Markives:


02019
02018 02017 02016
02015 02014 02013 02012
02011 02010 02009 02008
02007 02006 02005 02004

                  



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