Posts Tagged ‘hair’
Weekend Links!
* Star Trek and Lovecraft. Via r/daystrominstitute.
* The worst threat to higher education is its administration.
* Judge Rules Against Marquette Professor Over Public Rebuke of TA.
* Police Officer Who Fatally Shot 15-Year-Old Texas Boy Is Charged With Murder.
* Delta boots family off red-eye flight, threatens kids with “foster care.”
* Thank your parents: GOP Health Bill Jeopardizes Out-of-Pocket Caps in Employer Plans. The New Study That Shows Trumpcare’s Damage. Senate won’t vote on House-passed healthcare bill.That makes it more likely they’ll be able to pass something, unfortunately. Every Republican who voted for this abomination must be held accountable. Mail me to the GOP. It just gets worse every day.
Tomorrow’s headline: People with pre-existing conditions have troubled past
— Hippo (@InternetHippo) May 4, 2017
and what i want to know is
how do you like your blueeyed boy
Mister Death pic.twitter.com/5zSfAGFh1Q— Kip Manley (@kiplet) May 4, 2017
* It just gets worse, every day.
* A Principal Is Accused of Being a Communist, Rattling a Brooklyn School.
* Not even the dead will be safe if our enemy is victorious: You could soon be able to relive Hillary Clinton’s defeat every week on TV.
* Why would you bother doing Inhumans if you can’t do Medusa’s hair?
* HBO is developing 4 different Game Of Thrones spin-offs.
* The executive director of the Global Catastrophic Risk Institute, Seth Baum, and his colleagues describe what they call a double catastrophe scenario whereby an initial catastrophe, such as a major war between states that causes societal collapse, disrupts the regular injection of aerosols into the stratosphere, thereby causing a second catastrophe involving the climate. The latter event could induce widespread famines, social unrest, and economic meltdowns — or, at the extreme, it could precipitate a runaway greenhouse effect that turns Earth into an uninhabitable hellish cauldron like our planetary neighbor Venus. The result would be human extinction. In a phrase, once a stratospheric geoengineering program has been established by anyone, anywhere, it must not be interrupted for any reason, especially not abruptly. But one or more interruptions cannot be ruled out, hence the existential danger.
* The cold equations: Disney started over on Star Wars: Episode IX after Carrie Fisher’s death.
* It didn’t work. There’s only four types of people, and three of them are bad. True story. Don’t be nervous, they said. The three pillars of Canavanism. Another caption that works for any New Yorker cartoon. There will be no miracles here.
* And teach the controversy: how long ago and far away was it, really?
Written by gerrycanavan
May 6, 2017 at 3:24 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academia freedom, administrative blight, administrative bloat, air travel, airlines, America, Ben and Jerry's, Carrie Fisher, cartoons, centaurs, class struggle, communism, Daystrom Institute, Delta, Donald Trump, double catastrophe scenario, Episode 9, Game of Thrones, general election 2016, geoengineering, hair, HBOs, health care, health insurance, Hillary Clinton, historically black colleges, How the University Works, ice cream, Inhumans, John McAdams, leftism, lifetime limits, Lovecraft, Marquette, Marvel, Medusa, miracles, neoliberalism, New Yorker, pants, Paul Ryan, pizza, police, police brutality, police violence, politics, pre-existing conditions, race, racism, Red Scare, religion, Republicans, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science, social media, stage fright, Star Trek, Star Wars, tenure, the Senate, Twitter, Vermont
Big Tuesday Links!
* Sadly always relevant: How the Media Inspires Mass Shooters. So There’s Just Been a Mass Shooting. I bought an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle in Philly in 7 minutes.
* Since, in fact, we lack the ability to realise even a single one of these demands in the foreseeable future, and since all other apparent solutions are unavailing, the unwelcome thought begins to insinuate itself — we are going to live in a world with Daesh and its massacres no matter what we do.
* Presenting The Bee. Exciting new “Beyond Criticism” project from Lili Loofbourow.
* Along the way to a world of driverless cars there are many potential roadblocks: infrastructure issues, different technical standards, restrictive state licensing policies, and more. But something more problematic might be the one most likely to derail this important technology: excessive lawsuits. To avoid the chilling effect that excessive litigation might have on this life-saving innovation, Congress may need to provide a certain amount of legal immunity for creators of driverless car technologies, or at least create an alternative legal compensation system for when things go wrong.
* There are no ifs, maybes or caveats allowed in American sports and now in American culture—you’re either a champion or you’re a loser: a nothing.
* We Finally Know Why Birds Are So Freakishly Smart. The tragedy of the pit bull. Fugitive capybara captured in Toronto park 19 days after zoo escape.
* The Ecstatic Experience: “Hamilton,” “Hair,” and “Oklahoma!” “Hamilton” and History’s Darkened Rooms.
* Moving as a child can change who you are as an adult.
* Aldermen call for hearings on lead in water at Chicago schools.
* The Blacklist: Here are the media outlets banned by Donald Trump.
* Sad! These three campaign gurus for Jeb Bush, Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio have had some time to reflect on their loss to The Donald. And do they ever have stories to tell.
* The case for, and the case against, Elizabeth Warren as Clinton’s VP pick. Democrats vs Democrats. Clinton running even in Utah.
* Curb returns. So does Clementine.
* Harrison Ford is moving to one of the five or six cities I call home: Burlington, Vermont.
* Not all heroes wear capes: Traveler sues TSA for missed flight.
* Abolishing Daylight Savings Time in California.
* If you want to understand the contemporary moment. Why Trump Now? It’s the Empire, Stupid.
* Mongolia will become a global pioneer next month, when its national post office starts referring to locations by a series of three-word phrases instead of house numbers and street names.
For example, the White House, at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, becomes sulk.held.raves; the Tokyo Tower is located at fans.helpless.collects; and the Stade de France is at reporter.smoked.received.
Why, it couldn’t be simpler!
* First, let’s vote out all the lawyers.
* Video is terrible, is almost certainly the future of everything.
* And the future just isn’t very stable: Carbon nanotubes have been pegged as the wonder material that could finally allow us to build a space elevator. A discouraging new study suggests these microscopic strands aren’t as resilient as we thought—and all it could take is a single misplaced atom to bring the whole thing crashing down.
Written by gerrycanavan
June 14, 2016 at 3:25 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with actually existing journalism, actually existing media bias, air travel, airport security, Alexander Hamilton, America, animal consciousness, animals, Bernie Sanders, birds, Burlington, California, Captain America 3, capybaras, carbon nanotubes, cars, championships, charts, Chicago, childhood trauma, Civil War, Congress, criticism, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Daylight Savings Time, democracy, Democratic primary 2016, dogs, Donald Trump, Elizabeth Warren, empire, Facebook, film, futurity, games, general election 2016, globalization, guns, hair, Hamilton, Harrison Ford, Hillary Clinton, history, income inequality, ISIS, Jeb Bush, kids, lawyers, lead, lead poisoning, liability, Lili Loofbourow, literature, losers, Marco Rubio, mass shootings, Mongolia, moving, musical theater, musicals, NASA, neoliberalism, Oklahoma, Orlando, outer space, parents, pit bulls, plot, polls, pornography, regulatory capture, Republican primary 2016, Salvage, science fiction, self-driving cars, space elevator, sports, Star Wars, Ted Cruz, Telltale Games, text is best, The Bee, the courts, the Internet, the law, The Walking Dead, theory, TSA, Utah, Vermont, video, villains, virtual reality, water, weirdness, X-Wing, zoos
Weekend Links!
* New journal: Series: The International Journal of TV Serial Narratives.
* The full syllabus for my upcoming summer science fiction course is finished, if you’re interested. I’ve also updated the “online articles” section of my website with a link to Marquette’s online repository of my articles, which has some stuff people have been asking for (like my Snowpiercer essay).
* So why is TPP the only thing Obama has ever bothered to fight for?
or a path to single payer, or a Green Recovery, or… RT @lucasoconnor: Requisite ‘if only Obama had worked this hard for card check’ tweet
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 12, 2015
* “The hardest things are the title and the name of the girl.” Oh, so it’s ridiculously easy.
* Judge finds probable cause for murder charge against officer who killed Tamir Rice.
* Judge orders University of Illinois to release Steven Salaita emails.
* The only thing anyone can talk about.
The take too hot to hold. https://t.co/wDf0Vc64GA
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 12, 2015
* Every Single Federal Employee’s Social Security Number Was Hacked: Report. Incredible. I almost wonder if this breach could actually be so large that the government has to shift responsibility for fraud away from individual consumers.
* At its worst, however, Left Forum is Comic Con for Marxists—Commie Con, if you will—and an absolute shitshow of nerds and social rejects.
* On the heels of last week’s shocking news that the Transportation Security Administration has a whopping 95 percent failure rate at finding bombs and weapons, we are now learning that the TSA further failed to identify 73 airport workers with links to terrorism.
* ‘Debt-Free College’ Is Democrats’ New Rallying Cry.
* The Milwaukee Bucks bailout and Gov. Scott Walker’s questionable math.
* Why are so many companies spending record sums of money buying back their shares instead of reinvesting more of their profits in their business and their workers? What could possibly explain it?
* I thought homeschooling my kids would be simple. I was wrong.
* “If she disobeyed, they had told her, they’d cut off her hair.”
* Barbasol’s inclusion was mostly a fluke — the movie’s art director, John Bell, said he grabbed it off a prop shelf with little thought; in the book, smugglers used Gillette — but the shaving-cream maker now calls it one of its biggest victories: John Price, a marketing vice president for parent company Perio, called it “one of the most recognized brand integrations of all time.”
* Here’s how much it would cost to build Jurassic Park.
* One phenomenon that has so far flown under the radar in discussions of peer-to-peer production and the sharing economy but that demands recognition on its own is one for which I think an apt name would be crowdforcing. Crowdforcing in the sense I am using it refers to practices in which one or more persons decides for one or more others whether he or she will share his or her resources, without the other person’s consent or even, perhaps more worryingly, knowledge. While this process has analogs and has even itself occurred prior to the digital revolution and the widespread use of computational tools, it has positively exploded thanks to them, and thus in the digital age may well constitute a difference in kind as well as amount.
* I know Reason is the enemy and all, but their report on this mishandled sex assault case at Amherst is genuinely stunning.
* New, large study confirms that approximately 1 in 5 women suffer sexual assault at college.
* A program designed to help female college freshmen resist sexual assault is creating a lot of buzz among victims’ advocates and college educators. Most were encouraged to learn that incidents of rape had been cut in half among participants in a Canadian study of the program, which involved four three-hour sessions in which the women learned to recognize the danger of coercive situations and to fight back, verbally and physically.
* Scenes from the class struggle at god Reddit is awful.
* Counterpoint: Anne Frank’s Diary Should Have Been Burned.
* RT @SaintRPh: Guy lives next to airport. Painted this on roof to confuse passengers as they fly overhead. He lives in Milwaukee.
* Secrets of the Milwaukee Accent.
* Reality is weird: Tom Hardy and Charlize Theron hated each other, but their stunt doubles got married.
* 22 Incredible Facts About The Life and Career Of Sir Christopher Lee.
* Thanks, global warming: Now polar bears are devouring dolphins.
* Nearly Half of Senior Tenured Professors Want to Delay Retirement. Yeah, you’ll never get rid of me.
* Some people just want to watch the world burn.
* Future really getting weird now.
Written by gerrycanavan
June 13, 2015 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 3D printing, academia, academic freedom, academic journals, administrative blight, airport security, America, Amherst, animals, Anne Frank, austerity, Barack Obama, Barbasol, books, capitalism, Cassandra complex, CEOs, Christopher Lee, class struggle, Cleveland, climate change, college, crowdforcing, data, dialects, dolphins, due process, ecology, Fat People Hate, film, FOIA, fraud, free trade, Fury Road, futurity, hair, homeschooling, How the University Works, identity theft, James Bond, Jurassic Park, Jurassic World, kids today, language, Mad Max, Marquette, Michigan, Milwaukee, Milwaukee Bucks, my pedagogical empire, my scholarly empire, Nazis, necrofuturism, neoliberalism, obituary, polar bears, police brutality, police state, politics, privacy, product placement, race, Rachel Dolezal, racism, rape, rape culture, Reddit, retirement, school in the summer, science fiction, science is magic, Scott Walker, security, sharing economy, shitlords, Snowpiercer, stadiums, Steven Salaita, student debt, syllabi, Tamir Rice, television, tenure, the future is now, the Left, Title IX, Transpacific Partnership, true love, TSA, tuition, Twitter, UIUC, University of Wisconsin, UWM, Washington, Wisconsin, words, writing
Tuesday Night!
* In the 1960s, while the United States and the Soviet Union were playing out their battle of who would make it to the moon first and so dominate the galactic skies, a former high school teacher in Zambia decided his country needed a space program. Edward Festus Makuka Nkoloso founded the unofficial Zambia National Academy of Science, Space Research and Philosophy in 1960, and over the course of the next few years, attempted to launch the first Afronaut — his term —into space.
* Here are Marquette English’s course offerings for the fall. Tell your friends!
* The final victory over the Soviet Union did not lead to the domination of the market, but, in fact, cemented the dominance of conservative managerial elites, corporate bureaucrats who use the pretext of short-term, competitive, bottom-line thinking to squelch anything likely to have revolutionary implications of any kind.”
* Teacher punishes students with Game of Thrones spoilers.
* Grad school as debt machine.
* Announcing the Milwaukee Record.
* BP confirms oil spill into Lake Michigan from Whiting refinery. Ohio Pipeline Spill Twice As Large As Original Estimate. Ship Traffic Reopens For The Oil Industry Three Days After Texas’ 170,000 Gallon Oil Spill.
* Report: 95% Of Grandfathers Got Job By Walking Right Up And Just Asking.
* Paying journalists by the click: what could possibly go wrong?
* Alexander Bogdanov and the struggle for immortality.
* Department of can’t-win: Christian School Tells Eight-Year-Old Girl She Looks Too Much Like A Boy. Middle School Girls Protest Sexist Dress Code: ‘Are My Pants Lowering Your Test Scores?’ School Bans 9-year-old Who Shaved Her Head for a Friend With Cancer.
* A brief history of abortion, contraception, and the evangelical right. Justice Kennedy Thinks Hobby Lobby Is An Abortion Case — That’s Bad News For Birth Control.
* Meanwhile: Are Obamacare subsidies now in jeopardy?
* History Suggests It Might Not Get Better For Democrats.
* That’s why I’m preparing for the worst: The Walking Disney.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 25, 2014 at 8:37 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with abortion, actually existing media bias, administrative blight, Afrofuturism, Afronauts, Anthony Kennedy, Barack Obama, bureaucracy, capitalism, class struggle, clothes, clothing, communism, contraception, David Graeber, Democrats, Disney, dress uniforms, elites, employment, English, evangelical Christianity, Game of Thrones, general election 2016, grad school, hair, health care, Hobby Lobby, jobs, journalism, kids today, Lake Michigan, Marquette, mashups, Milwaukee, misogyny, neoliberalism, Ohio, oil, oil spills, outer space, pedagogy, politics, pollution, revolution, sexism, Space Race, spoiler alert, student debt, Supreme Court, Texas, the court, the law, The Onion, The Walking Dead, what it is we think we're doing, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?, Zambia, zombies