A power, pop-culture, family

i just realized this:

Obama’s chief of staff is a guy named Rahm Emanuel.  Two interesting facts about him i learned from his Wikipedia entry:

  1. He was the inspiration for the character Josh Lyman on Aaron Sorkin‘s The West Wing.  My sister would know better but i believe he was pretty cool
  2. Rahm’s brother, Ari Emanuel, is the inspiration for the character Ari on HBO’s Entourage (Jeremy Piven).

Is that not an amazing made-for-tv family?!  I wonder if they sit around the dinner table over Thanksgiving and talk about which fictional character is cooler?   While Lyman is probably a better person, i’d give the edge to Ari as he’s much more entertaining and popular.   What do you think?

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

More Pirates vs. Jedi

Just got a recent comment on my post of “8 Ways Pirates of the Carribean Steals from Return of the Jedi.” The original post has generated quite a bit of discussion – logging over 100 comments!  This last comment had some good ones….

  1. The two funny pirates are physically similar to the droids too. One is tall and skinny (like C-3PO) and the other is short and round (like R2D2)
  2. Jack is taken alive by Jones as a sacrifice to his friends, just like Han Solo is taken alive by Vader as a sacrificed to save his friends.
  3. A former villain (Barbosa,) comes back to help rescue a former rival (Jack), and also feels Jack stole his ship the black pearl.    A former villain (Lando) comes back to help rescue a former rival (Han), and also feels Han stole his ship the millennium falcon.
  4. Elizabeth’s home is destroyed by the villains at the beginning of the movie; Leia’s home planet is destroyed at the beginning of the movie.
  5. Both Elizabeth and Leia are royalty.

Love my readers  🙂

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Two more throughts about Obama

Rev. Santino endorses Barack Obama for Preside...

First….Imagine a goat farmer in Kenya in 1958.  A goat farmer.  Now imagine that he has a child.  Now imagine that this child grows up to become President of the United States.  It’s just so incredible.  Wow

Second….in my last post about Obama, i talked about the transparency that he might bring to the office.  Now he’s launched www.change.gov which has a blog, details of action and tracking of projects and plans.  Now that’s what i’m talking about.  I like it.

Let me tell you about Synecdoche, New York

synecdoche-ny-introspective-img

I just saw the most interesting movie tonight.  At least i think it was interesting, i’m still trying to figure it out.  It was Synecdoche, New York by writer/director Charlie Kaufman (Being John Malkovich, Adaptation, Enternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind).  Here are some thoughts that pop into my brain about it:

The one word i can think of is recursive.  When a character who is in a play, creates another play and gets a character to play himself to start another play inside the play – it becomes a mindfuck.  And that play is about starting a play and getting another character to play himself and so on.  It’s all recursive. It made me think of Adaptation and how Charlie Kaufman has done this before with a movie that is describing itself to the audience.  A movie that is self-aware.  In fact that’s what Kaufman does every time.  “Being John Malkovich” literally got inside Malkovich’s mind, “Confessions of a Dangerous Mind” has someone who was at once a spy and a game show host, “Adaptation” had twin brothers who would act out roles the other could not, and “Enternal Sunshine” is all about holding on your memories.

The movie reminded me of how i felt when i watched PT Anderson’s Magnolia.  I am thinking: this is a fascinating story, these are great actors with great performances (Phillip Seymour is awesome in both), and these are great and unpredictable and non-cliched lines.   This is so close to being a great movie, but it’s not GREAT because it’s too long and it’s not hitting me at the core hard enough.  The film didn’t HIT me.  Those two directors, PT and CK, will each make a GREAT movie – a true classic. Both have been close, but neither has yet.  That said, i didn’t like “Big Lebowski” the first time i saw it and i could see myself drooling over this after the 2nd and 3rd viewings.

main

The movie is LONG. It didn’t bother me because none of it is cliched. If it ended at one point, it would have been a nice and neat story. But it didn’t and added a whole other element.  The length made it more about life – everybody’s (or anybody’s) life.  Someone getting a job, growing, changing, making mistakes, having success and failures and acting as someone else and later feeling remorse.  All the actions of life are on display here.  That’s not a nice and neat story, which this could have been at 90 minutes but at 130 and much bigger it’s quite an interesting movie.  It’s more comprehensive

In these times of self-absorption and self-centeredness, never has there been a hero or story where someone self-examines themselves to the extend that Caden Cotard (Phillip Seymour) does in S,NY. All he does is think about himself, his shortcomings, he ailings and failings.  He’s so self-conscious that his closest confidant is someone who has followed him around for 20 years whose day-to-day role is to also act like Caden Cotard.  He is so far in his head that he confuses weeks for years, forgets daughters and is fine substituting actors of himself for himself.  The whole movie is just so damn existential.

You all have any other thoughts?

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Going from Movies to Music

Joaquin Phoenix, the star of the Johhny Cash film Walk The Line just announced that he’s leaving the movie business and going into music full-time.  Sounds like a bad idea to me. Russell Crowe, Keifer Sutherland, Keanu Reeves, Billy Bob Thorton, and others have tried this and failed spectucularly.

However, i also know that Jason Schwartzman (Max in Rushmore) has been in 2 successful bands (Phantom Planet and now Coconut Records).  Are there any others that have gone from movies to music that i’m missing?

Play this Coconut Records song – it’s one of my favorites (West Coast).

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

We Now Live in Obama Nation

Last night we elected Barack Hussein Obama to be president of United States.  I’m incredible excited about this – much more so than i thought i would be.  I find that i’m constantly wedged between people who are overly optimisitic about the political situation in American and people who are consistenly negative and pessemistic.  Listening to Obama last night, i couldn’t help but caught up in the hope and optimism that is reverbirating through the country.  Some things i feel:

  1. We have an intelligent president again.  Obama was president of the Law Review at Harvard.  You don’t get there by being competent.  Clinton was this way too.  Bush wasn’t. I like the thought of having a President who can take in lots of inputs and process them intelligently.
  2. I feel that Obama will be more transparent than past Presidents.  This isn’t a rip on Bush but rather a reflection of our times.  With the rise of the Internet, information is everywhere and the world is becoming exposed.  You can no longer protect information. Instead you need to over-communicate and release it.  Angelina Jolie figured this out and releases more press releases than any other celebrity around and i think Obama has too.  One line he spoke yesterday was: But I will always be honest with you about the challenges we face. I will listen to you, especially when we disagree.” makes me think we’ll more information from the Obama camp than we’ve heard from past presidents
  3. The return of Joe Biden.  Biden was a Senator at age 30 and was once thought to be the future of the Democratic party.  Time hasn’t shown that to be true but it’ll be interesting to see how he puts his foreign relation skills to use
  4. Shedding the dillusionment of American Politics.  Most people i know couldn’t care less about what the govement does. “It doesn’t matter to me” is a common response.  But, these same people felt inspired by a candidate for the first time (at leat that i can remember).  The passion i saw the older generation talk about JFK, i saw people talk about Obama and i felt it too.  If Obama would have lost, i think we would have lost the younger voters forever.  Fortunately it’s moving in the other direction

I’m happier than i ever thought i’d be about a President.  Last nigth when the results were announced all the cars in Hollywood started honking their horns for about 30 minutes. It was loud, obnoxious and totally amazing.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

NYTimes is the only legit map

I’m at work and trying to figure out who’s winning the election and what i notice is that every site is different.  Some have called over 15 states already whereas others have only called 2.  How can this happen?  It can happen b/c lots of sites are just making the news up.

The NYTimes however has a map that is reporting county by county and showing that reporting in real time.  This is real facts and you can see the actual information as it comes in.  Sure, they are way behind Yahoo, CNBC, CNN and BBC in results but they happen to have the real deal.  That’s where my browser’s going to be for the next few hours.

County by County
County by County
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

New Microsoft Services

Image representing Microsoft as depicted in Cr...

Image via CrunchBase

I’ve been pretty anti-microsoft for a while because it seems that they always miss the boat.  However, they do have LOTS of cash (40+ billion) and a huge development force.  Becauase of this i was surprised they didn’t get more press for the news they spit out last week.  Four big things appeared out of last week’s Professional Developer Conference (PDC):

  1. They announced Azure, a set of cloud services that competes with Amazon’s S3.  Another big player will really solidify the category.
  2. They showed off Windows 7 which is getting high good hype from the blogosphere.
  3. They showed off new Web-based versions of Microsoft Office that were really nice.  They are really late here but if they can get up to parity with Zoho they could dominate
  4. They also released new Mac and Mobile versions of Mesh and further explained how that’ll enable new kinds of Internet-connected apps to be built.

All in all it was a HUGE week for Microsoft. I just don’t know why nobody noticed.  It is because we’re all Mac fanboys and want them to fail (I know i do)?  What do you think?

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

More Dean Kamen

As many readers know, i’m a huge Dean Kamen fan. I think he’s one of the most important Americans alive.  He’s a true thinker and doer in every since of the word.  He sets goals and attacks them with passion and intelligence.

There’s a new article in the Telegraph UK about him.

It talks about some of his old inventions (150 medical patents and, of course, The Segway) and some of his new ones such as the iBot (wheelchair that stands), the Power Arm (robotic arm for people missing the limb), an electric car that uses the Sterling Engine. It also mentions:

Kamen’s latest project may well be his most ambitious yet: he wants to bring electricity and clean water to the Third World. His plan is not the creation of centralised infrastructure for power grids and sewage treatment, but a small-scale and, relatively, cheap solution. ‘Like, how about a device that a couple of people can haul into a village that can turn any source of water – which is typically toxic these days, that kills two million kids a year – into a thousand litres of water a day. How about if we could carry something into a village that could give people a way to make electricity?’

After 12 years working on these two problems, the engineers at Deka now have their solutions on show at the workshops in Manchester. The first is the ‘Slingshot’, a large box about the size of an office photocopier, sheathed in black protective foam, that can cleanse water of any contaminant from radionuclides to sewage, and run for years at a time without maintenance. The second is another metal box, five feet square, connected to a bottle of compressed gas, which emits a low murmur of humming energy. This is a Stirling engine, similar to the one installed in his electric car, but large and efficient enough to electrify an entire village, which can be driven by any locally available source of heat. Both devices have already been proved amazingly effective: one six-month test has used a Stirling engine to provide electric light to a village in Bangladesh, powered by burning the methane from a pit filled with cow dung; Slingshot has undergone similar tests in a settlement in rural Guatemala. But Kamen has yet to find a commercial partner to manufacture either of the devices for the customers that need them most. ‘The big companies,’ he says, ‘long ago figured out – the people in the world that have no water and have no electricity have no money.’ He’s tried the United Nations, too, but discovered a Catch-22: non-governmental organisations won’t buy the devices until they’re in full production.

The article also talks about his fancy and cool toys. For instance he owns a small island….

Dean Kamen on one of his inventions, the Segwa...

Image via Wikipedia

But there’s also North Dumpling Island, three acres of gravel and sand in Long Island Sound, home to a lighthouse with a library and wine cellar that Kamen bought for $2.5 million in 1986. Soon afterwards, he announced his intention to erect a wind turbine there – and when New York State authorities objected, he declared that North Dumpling would become an independent nation, with a territorial limit of 200 inches. He now likes to refer to himself as Lord Dumpling, and will tell anyone who will listen about his fiefdom’s currency (the 250,000 Dumpling note features a pen-and-ink portrait of Kamen himself, wearing a bow tie and a cap with a propeller on it), newspaper (The North Dumpling Times) and customs regulations (a printed visa form includes spaces to provide distinguishing marks of both the applicant’s face and buttocks). Kamen appointed friends and family to positions in the Dumpling cabinet, including Ministers of Brunch and Nepotism, and now keeps a copy of the artificially yellowed North Dumpling Constitution behind glass on an upstairs wall at Westwind.

Although he’s often labelled a failure because of the limited success of the Segway, it’s clear he remains an optimistic and driven guy.  Saying: “I’m more than happy to let history answer the question of whether my ideas are stupid, or important.”  Considering his inventions are already helping every person who needs an insulin pump, I’m pretty sure History will look back at him pretty damn favorably

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

David Eggers

I got a little shot of inspiration today by listening to Dave Eggers’ TEDTalk where he tells his story about how he took his desire to give kids more academic attention and formed a movement.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l3QbzvT6vko]

Eggers is an inspirational guy and here’s a link to a good quote i found from him last year.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]