Posts Tagged ‘Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon’
Wednesday Links!
* In case you missed it, a Twitter conversation inspired a post with actual content on this blog yesterday: Meritocracy, Lottery, Game: Notes on the Academic Job Market. Of course, I wasn’t first:
@gerrycanavan back in the day a berkeley grad student circulated a satirical "game theory" paper about the academic job market
— reclaim UC (@reclaimuc) October 1, 2014
@gerrycanavan the dominant strategy, it argued, was something called "the woodchipper strategy"
— reclaim UC (@reclaimuc) October 1, 2014
* Elsewhere in the academic job market genre: Not Lottery/Not Meritocracy, What Is It? From 2013! The Top 5 Mistakes Women Make in Academic Settings. Twelve Steps to Being a “Good Enough” Professor.
* And elsewhere in my media empire:
@mattfrost Yes. I sent that @gerrycanavan tweet to my staff yesterday saying it was the cornerstone of understanding contemp American gov.
— Christopher Hayes (@chrislhayes) October 1, 2014
The insightful tweet was this one:
The “policy” disjuncture between “domestic policy” (byzantine proceduralism) and “foreign policy” (half-cocked chaos) is really interesting.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) September 30, 2014
One out of 63,000’s not bad!
* We were also riffing on Twitter yesterday about the possibility of TV shows about campus police, never stopping to realize that of course it’s all already happened years ago.
* Eight faculty members go on strike at the General Theological Seminary, which the administration says is tantamount to quitting. A big precedent could be set here if they get away with it.
* It will take nearly $34 million each year over a 20-year period to address deferred maintenance needs and capital improvements at four major Milwaukee cultural institutions and provide public financing for a new arena.
* Elon Musk explains how we’ll colonize Mars.
* A brief FAQ on Steven Salaita.
I have some other weird idiosyncratic justification for why he was fired that avoids the plain reality that he was fired for holding controversial political views.
* A critique of the Gotham programme: Marxism and superheroes.
* Brain disease found in 76 of 79 NFL players examined in study.
* Muslim NFL player penalized for praying after touchdown.
* Pa. Official Admits Errors In Investigation Of Whether Fracking Waste Spoiled Drinking Water. “Errors” undersells what seems to be pretty deliberate omissions and lies.
* Here’s What Happened The One Time When The U.S. Had Universal Childcare.
* Decadence watch: “A ‘Tetris’ Movie Is in the Works.”
* Resource curse watch: This Month the U.S. Could Pass Saudi Arabia as the World’s Biggest Petroleum Producer.
* I think I already linked to this one, but why not: A long medium post on the moneyless, post-scarcity economics of Star Trek.
* Netflix has reached a deal with The Weinstein Co. for its first original movie — a sequel to Ang Lee’s 2000 martial arts pic “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” — set to hit IMAX theaters and the streaming-video service simultaneously next summer. I am on board.
* And Community just can’t catch a break: now Yvette Nicole Brown is leaving, too.
Written by gerrycanavan
October 1, 2014 at 7:40 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, academic freedom, academic job market, academic jobs, America, Ang Lee, byzantine proceduralism, campus police, childcare, Chris Hayes, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, class struggle, community, concussions, Cops, Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, Dan Harmon, decadence, Elon Musk, film, football, fossil fuels, games, Gaza, governmentality, half-cocked chaos, headbrick, hydrofracking, Islam, Israel, labor, lies and lying liars, lottery, Mars, Marxism, masculinity, meritocracy, Milwaukee, misogyny, moral panics, my media empire, natural gas, Netflix, NFL, oil, outer space, Palestine, pedagogy, Pennsylvania, policy, politics, pollution, post-scarcity, religion, resource curse, Saudi Arabia, science fiction, sexism, sports, Star Trek, Steven Salaita, strikes, superheroes, teaching, television, tenure, Tetris, Twitter, war games, water, welfare state, women