Posts Tagged ‘Friendship Is Magic’
Blogging from the Mid-Atlantic, But the Other Way
* An awakening anatomy of the average life’s two years of boredom, 6 months of watching commercials, 67 days of heartbreak, and 14 minutes of pure joy. 14 minutes of joy seems low even for a single day. What are you people doing with yourselves?
* The Voyager records, as art.
* I’m With™ Clinton’s ‘Innovation Agenda’ for Higher Ed.
murder shouldn’t be *legal* for entrepreneurs but it shouldn’t exactly be illegal either
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 30, 2016
entrepreneurs should get to run three red lights every six months, no questions asked
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 28, 2016
* Republicans seem pretty obviously right about this one. I don’t see how there’s any case for its propriety, but here’s a try.
* The Humiliating Practice of Sex-Testing Female Athletes.
* Estimate of U.S. Transgender Population Doubles to 1.4 Million Adults.
* For 20 years, the center has blocked off female-only hours to accommodate the area’s large Hasidic population. The pool has no male-only hours, and some Hasidic men swim during the hours that are open to all genders. An anonymous complaint was lodged recently with the city’s Human Rights Commission, which sent a notice to the parks department this spring saying that the policy might violate a city law barring gender discrimination in public accommodations.
* Using the budget usually reserved for the committee, they created a program called Dudes Understanding Diversity and Ending Stereotypes, or DUDES.
* He said he’s glad colleges have found the research useful, but he is cautious about the institutions that are taking it as an absolute. Mr. Sue said his goal had always been to educate people, not punish or shame them, if they engage in microaggressions.
* Boris Johnson and the Cuckoo Nest Plot. Now even Gove says he won’t Brexit before the end of the year. Sanders and Corbyn: The Survivors. Brexit Might Never Happen. Brexit: a disaster decades in the making. So you want to con a country. Based on a close reading of Frank Bruni’s Brexit commentary, “A Bachelor Named Britain, Looking for Love” (reproduced below the question), please describe the bearing of the New York Times op-ed staff on the collapse of serious political argument in American establishment institutions in the early 21st century.
* How J.R.R. Tolkien Found Mordor on the Western Front. Bonus Tolkien! How To Tell If You Are In A J.R.R. Tolkien Book.
A wizard has roped you into a quest because one of your ancestors invented golf.
* Westeros Is Poorly Designed. A Followup: It’s Okay That Westeros Is Poorly Designed. Some more nerdery on the subject.
When asked how fast the ships in Babylon 5 travel, creator J. Michael Straczynski replied that they travel “at the speed of plot.”
How big is Westeros? “Plot-sized.” How many people live there? “Plot thousand.” How do they make their living? “Tilling the plot.”
* Game of Thrones season 6 was good TV that shows why the series will never be great.
* Why did the Stars Wars and Star Trek worlds turn out so differently? Please Stop Marrying Fictional Characters to People They Met as Children, It’s Creepy. I started thinking absently about Steve Rogers’ jogging route during my run today and then i couldn’t STOP thinking about it because there’s literally NO WAY it makes sense unless you accept that he is specifically fucking up his entire morning routine to get another look at the cute boy he clocked on his run.
* How to Get Tenure. Counterpoint: You Probably Won’t Get Tenure.
* How to Give a Conference Paper.
* Elsewhere on the academic beat: Study Finds First-Year Students Who Take 15 Credits Succeed. Why Can’t My New Employees Write? The New McCarthyism. Right-Wing Elites Love Your Abigail Fisher Hot Take.
* Rationalia has already garnered some powerful enemies.
Sadly, there is no solution to the #Rexit crisis save the formation of a new country, South Rationalia, which I must reluctantly lead.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 30, 2016
* Amazing, awful: Author Gay Talese disavows his latest book amid credibility questions.
* Unprecedented’: Scientists declare ‘global climate emergency’ after jet stream crosses equator. The Window for Avoiding a Dangerous Climate Change Has Closed. The Day After Tomorrow Happened 30,000 Years Ago. Geoengineering at the CIA.
* Physicists just confirmed a pear-shaped nucleus, and it could ruin time travel forever. Not if I undiscover it yesterday!
* America is lying about its involvement in Africa: AFRICOM’s reports simply don’t add up.
* Secret History of the AOL Disc Campaign.
* More from the twilight of the law schools.
* “This is the single greatest panel ever published in a Transformers comic.”
* Trumpocalypse watch! Another boondoggle. And another. And another. And another. This one is probably the best yet. 4 Ways Cleveland’s Colleges Are Bracing for the Republican Convention. Who will win the presidency? Why not play along at home! And if you want a vision of the future: imagine Trump’s vice-presidential candidates stomping on a human face, forever.
Written by gerrycanavan
July 1, 2016 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, actually existing media bias, affirmative action, Africa, America, AOL, Battle of the Somme, Bernie Sanders, Bill Clinton, books, boondoggles, boredom, Boris Johnson, Brexit, Britain, bullying, Captain America, Chris Christie, CIA, class struggle, Cleveland, climate change, college, comics, conferences, debt, Department of Justice, Donald Trump, ecology, economics, education, emails, England, entrepreneurs, fantasy, first-year students, Friendship Is Magic, Game of Thrones, Gay Talese, gender, general election 2016, geoengineering, geography, George R. R. Martin, Harry Potter, HBO, Hillary Clinton, How the University Works, if you want a vision of the future, imperialism, innovation, Jeremy Corbyn, journamalism, joy, kids today, law schools, Lord of the Rings, Loretta Lynch, love, maps, marriage, masculinity studies, McCarthyism, Michael Gove, microaggressions, misogyny, Mordor, My Little Pony, NASA, Neil deGrasse, neocolonialism, New Journalism, New York Times, Newt Gingrich, outer space, plot, politics, polls, race, racism, Rationalia, Republican National Convention, running, scams, science, science fiction, sexism, sports, Star Trek, Star Wars, student debt, swimming, television, tenure, the 1990s, The Day After Tomorrow, The Hobbit, the law, the speed of plot, they say time is the fire in which we burn, time travel, Tolkien, Tories, Transformers, transgender issues, Tyler Cowen, United Kingdom, veepstakes, Voyager spacecraft, Washington DC, Westeros, World War I, worldbuilding, writing
Weekend Links
* Because you demanded it! The Cambridge Companion to American Science Fiction is now available in Kindle format as well for just $9.99.
* SFRA CFP: “The SF We Don’t (Usually) See: Suppressed Histories, Liminal Voices, Emerging Media.” June 25-27 at Stony Brook.
* Mark Bould on African Science Fiction 101.
* The Moral Hazard of Big Data.
* Racism, monuments, and historical memory.
* The Anthropocene Project. An Encyclopedia (2014–).
* The Crusades: Teach the controversy!
* Friendship Is Complicated: Art, commerce, and the battle for the soul of My Little Pony.
* Now, a union that’s been rapidly organizing adjuncts around the country thinks that number should quintuple. Last night, on a conference call with organizers across the country, the SEIU decided to extend the franchise with a similar aspirational benchmark: A “new minimum compensation standard” of $15,000. Per course. Including benefits. To put this in perspective, a tenure-track professor earning $50,000 on a 4/4 (100% teaching, no research, no service) is paid $6250 a course — so this is definitely a realistic target.
* Auburn Approves $14-Million Scoreboard, College Football’s Largest.
* Scott Walker thinks my university has fat to trim. Yet my department is barely scraping by.
* Scott Walker amends the Girl Scout Oath. From otherscottwalkeredits.tumblr.com.
* The disjuncture then comes when I consider how we are encouraged to carry ourselves in the academy. I feel a lot of pressure to professionalize, and the prescriptions for professionalization often run counter to my way of being in the world. I also struggle with the directive that I am supposed to professionalize my students. I don’t hold with the idea that I should train students to be better workers, because the content of “better” — more obedient, more efficient, whatever — runs counter to what I want to teach. In my feminist theories courses, I say, “Yeah, I just gave you assignments with deadlines! But I also want to say to you, what’s so great about work? Why do we believe work is supposed to be edifying? Should we always have to be productive? Why do we imagine work as something that gives us dignity? What if it’s just wearing us down?” My history in punk totally informs these attempts to practice other ways of being in a classroom, and other ways of being a professor.
* Jury Awards $400,000 to Professor Laid Off by Clark Atlanta U. This is an amazing result especially considering that there are 53 other people eligible for a payout.
* Thousands Of Dominicans Woke Up This Week Without Citizenship In Any Country.
* How Science Fiction Will Help Us Go to Mars.
* Paging J. Walter Weatherman: Family arrested in fake kidnapping plot to teach 6-year-old stranger danger, police say.
* And here is where we see the true malignant force that drives the Internet: It is the purest mechanism yet through which everyone can express every idiot opinion they have about everything to everyone else.
* Ableism, neurotypicality, and the vaccine debate.
* Mississippi, #1 in vaccination. The Anti-Vaccine Movement Should Be Ridiculed, Because Shame Works.
* Rufus King named one of the most challenging high schools in America.
* We Can Now Build Autonomous Killing Machines. And That’s a Very, Very Bad Idea. I say teach the controversy!
* Dibs on the screenplay: Half the DNA on the NYC Subway Matches No Known Organism.
* Science is magic: Engineers Developing a Retainer That Could Let the Hearing Impaired Experience Sound With Their Tongue.
* Research into psychedelics, shut down for decades, is now yielding exciting results.
* The Beginning of Mein Kampf, as Told by Coca-Cola. Alas, nothing gold can stay.
* Why every member of the crew should have been courtmartialed after Generations.
* Parents who raise their kids without religion are doing just fine, studies say, possibly even better. Overall, not believing in God seems to make people and their offspring more tolerant. Less racist. Less sexist. Enviro-friendly. And their kids care less about what’s cool, which—say it with me—only makes them cooler.
* Teen mom sends breast milk to baby she gave up for adoption. Dad Refuses to Give Up Newborn Son With Down Syndrome. Armenia, we need to talk.
* How Men’s Rights Leader Paul Elam Turned Being A Deadbeat Dad Into A Moneymaking Movement.
* DC Comics will rebrand, again. More details.
* Fewer Top Graduates Want to Join Teach for America. I’ve seen a lot of celebration of this fact that seems not to see the improving economy as a factor.
* Gendered Language in Teacher Reviews: This interactive chart lets you explore the words used to describe male and female teachers in about 14 million reviews from RateMyProfessor.com. Is the Professor Bossy or Brilliant? Much Depends on Gender.
* Canada’s Highest Court Affirms The Right To Doctor-Assisted Suicide.
* We Are Watching Brian Williams’ Entire Career Implode.
* And it’s a little unbelievable that it’s taken this long: Netflix reportedly developing new live-action series based on Legend of Zelda.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 7, 2015 at 8:30 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with ableism, academia, adjuncts, adoption, Africa, Andy Weir, animals, Armenia, Arrested Development, atheism, Auburn, autism, breastfeeding, Brian Williams, CFPs, citizenship, Coca-Cola, college football, college sports, conferences, Connor, Crusades, cultural preservation, DC Comics, deadbeat dads, deafness, disability, divorce, DNA, doctor-assisted suicide, Dominican Republic, Down's Syndrome, drones, euthanasia, Friendship Is Magic, games, gender, Girl Scouts, great parenting, Hitler, Iraq, kids today, Legend of Zelda, LSD, Mark Bould, Mars, math, Mein Kampf, men's rights, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, misogyny, Mississippi, monuments, My Little Pony, NCAA, Netflix, New 52, New York, outer space, pedagogy, psychedelic drugs, punk, racism, Rate My Professor, reboots, Rufus King, science fiction, science is magic, science is terrifying, Scott Walker, SEIU, sexism, SFRA, Star Trek, stateless persons, student evaluations, subways, suicide, Teach for America, teach the controversy, teaching, technology, tenure, the Anthropocene, the Internet, the kids are all right, The Martian, TNG, University of Wisconsin, vaccines, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, what it is I think I'm doing, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?, Zoey