Posts Tagged ‘Neill Blomkamp’
#OEBStudies for All Your #OEBStudies Needs
* I’m at the Huntington Library in Pasadena, presenting as part of the Octavia Butler studies conference here. Here’s a great writeup from the organizers, Ayana Jamieson and Moya Bailey. Hashtag #OEBStudies!
* Lumenscent Threads: Knowing Octavia Butler through a Community That Loved Her.
* I also got in a big Twitter to-do with Noah Berlatsky about the Oankali, if you want some extra bonus OEB content.
* Then next week I’m back in California for the Science Fiction Research Association conference at Riverside, giving a talk called “No, Speed Limit: Hyperspace in the Anthropocene” (and doing a bunch of SFRA executive committee stuff too I guess).
* “Rakka,” a nightmarish SF film from Neill Blomkamp, narrated by Sigourney Weaver. Seems almost like proof of concept for the Alien sequel they won’t let him do…
* And why not? Here’s an Irish one.
* The Han Solo prequel film, like every other Star Wars followup Disney has attempted, has encountered problems that have crashed production. This time they’ve fired the directors and brought in Ron Howard to attempt to salvage the project.
* Jon Ossoff’s Georgia special election loss shows Democrats could use a substantive agenda. Nonsense! They’re doing great. Why Jon Ossoff’s loss is bad news for Democrats’ 2018 hopes. Keep hope alive.
* Memo shows what major donors like Goldman Sachs want from the Democratic Party. Class struggle in America doesn’t look exactly like you think.
* Who Is Getting Rich Off the Secret Health-Care Overhaul?
* Senate Health Bill Gives Huge Tax Cuts to Businesses, High-Income Households. G.O.P. Health Plan Is Really a Rollback of Medicaid. A helpful chart of the differences between the Senate and House bills and the status quo. The Senate health bill is a recipe for a death spiral. Wheelchairs and zip ties. The littlest lobbyist: a 6-year-old, whose life depends on ACA, heads to Capitol Hill. There will be deaths.
Republicans: we're going to decimate the healthcare system unimpeded
Democrats: that's it, we're gonna *pulls out posterboard* pic.twitter.com/aZ8tzwwCnY
— Ayesha A. Siddiqi (@AyeshaASiddiqi) June 23, 2017
2015-2016 was when i finally learned to spell "millennial"
2017 was when i finally learned to spell "guillotine"— Gravitas Free Zone🤖 (@NoraReed) June 22, 2017
#TrumpcareInOneSentence pic.twitter.com/aeSQgEZ3jS
— WorkingFamiliesParty (@WorkingFamilies) June 22, 2017
* Going on Fox News cost me my job, professor claims.
* Don’t Trust a Republican Just Because He Hates Trump.
Frum, McMullin, etc will all sit 2020 out or reluctantly / not-so-reluctantly endorse a supposedly improved Trump over an unacceptable Dem. https://t.co/ZL7o44sxqs
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 21, 2017
* Corey Robin on China Miéville’s October.
* The Pittsburgh Fairy Tale: Pittsburgh’s much-touted revival has remade the region for the wealthy while leaving workers and the poor behind.
* Twilight of the CEOs. Uber doesn’t even currently have a CEO, COO, CFO, or CMO, “in addition to other open positions.”
* Ted Chiang was right! Attractive Students Get Higher Grades.
* Probably the only good thing that has ever happened on Twitter.
* Hunting for Antibiotics in the World’s Dirtiest Places.
* The New Free Speech is a right-wing grift, part 29.
* “North Carolina is the only state in U.S. where no doesn’t mean no.”
* “Bill Cosby to Teach Young People How to Avoid Sexual Assault Charges.”
I think it’s unrealistic that Offred didn’t flee America before the final takeover. https://t.co/vbLWS1iW5b
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 23, 2017
* But it’s not ALL deranged misogyny! N.H. Republicans Accidentally Approved a Bill Allowing Pregnant Women to Commit Murder.
* Looks like the marketing team have had a word.
* This seems fine: Elections officials outgunned in Russia’s cyberwar against America.
* Sega!
Written by gerrycanavan
June 23, 2017 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #BlackLivesMatter, #TheResistance, A Series of Unfortunate Events, AHCA, Alien, America, antibiotics, Bill Cosby, calliagnosia, CEOs, charts, China Miéville, class struggle, consent, Dawn, DC Comics, democrat, Democrats, disability, Disney, Donald Trump, elections, Elon Musk, Fox News, free speech, games, general election 2020, gentrification, Georgia, Gilead, Goldman Sachs, Han Solo, Handmaid's Tale, HBO, health care, health insurance, Huntington Library, hyperspace, Ireland, jokes, Jon Ossoff, Laura Kipnis, Liking What You See: A Documentary, maps, Mars, midterm election 2018, murder, my scholarly empire, Neill Blomkamp, North Carolina, Octavia Butler, October, Parable of the Trickster, Paul F. Tompkins, Philando Castile, Pittsburgh, police state, police violence, politics, Rakka, rape, rape culture, Republicans, Ron Howard, Russia, Russian Revolution, science, science fiction, Science Fiction Research Association, Sega, Star Wars, Ted Chiang, Title IX, Twitter, Uber, University of Wisconsin, Watchmen, Wisconsin, Xenogenesis
Saturday Night Links!
* CFP: The Handmaid’s Tale: Gender, Genre Adaptation – a one-day symposium. Race and The Handmaid’s Tale. Margaret Atwood Annotates Season 1 of ‘The Handmaid’s Tale.’
* A Dangerous Business: Being a Female Professor.
* Two Americas: Those Who Leave Home, and Those Who Stay.
* A Brief History of Violence Against Members of Congress. The start of a disturbing new chapter.
* But now we have legislation that will change the lives of millions, and they haven’t even summoned the usual suspects to explain what a great idea it is. If hypocrisy is the tribute vice pays to virtue, Republicans have decided that even that’s too much; they’re going to try to pass legislation that takes from the poor and gives to the rich without even trying to offer a justification. More at Vox.
* American Health Care Tragedies Are Taking Over Crowdfunding.
* The Senate health care bill is expected to allow states to relax the Affordable Care Act rules only on benefits, not on pricing as the House bill does. But that change could impact people far beyond those states, according to anew analysis by the liberal Center for American Progress — because it could lead to a return of annual and lifetime benefit limits, and not just in the states with the waivers. Don’t stop working those phones.
* Trump buckles on the Dreamers. But: Border Patrol Arrests Immigrants Seeking Medical Care During Desert Heat Wave. Trump’s move to deport Iraqi Christians stirs outcry. ICE nabs teenager hours before his senior prom, days before his graduation ceremony.
* Trump is likely to get much, much worse. Here are a few big things to watch for. A Very, Very Dangerous Situation. The WaPo Obstruction Blockbuster and the World of Hurt To Come. Robert Mueller chooses his investigatory dream team. Here we go.
* Donald Trump’s Cabinet members, ranked by their over-the-top praise of Trump.
* Now That’s What I Call #TheResistance.
* It’s very slowly happening here.
* That’s part of a far broader story: Republicans have a coherent and awful vision, while Democrats have a better but confused vision. Republicans want to cut taxes all the time; Democrats want to sometimes cut some taxes and certainly aren’t committed to raising taxes on principle. Republicans want to ban all abortions; many Democrats favor certain restrictions on abortion, depending. The ur-Democratic legislation is Obamacare, which undoubtedly improved the status quo but which is a tangled mishmash of public and private and which does not offer anything like a simple and coherent policy like “Medicare for all.” Republicans are the party of small government; Democrats are the party of jury-rigged quasi-entitlements via convoluted tax credits. Is it any wonder conservatives win so often? An evil but directly and unapologetically stated policy platform beats a better but cowardly and convoluted one any day, politically.
In both the UK & the US right now, only the left can defend its position on most issues without outright lying and/or intolerable vagueness.
— Benjamin Kunkel (@kunktation) June 14, 2017
* If social compacts without any leeway for idiosyncrasy or dissent tend toward dictatorship, untrammeled individualism tends toward nihilism. The once-again great America Trump envisages is a fusion of the worst of both, and you can’t say our movies didn’t predict him. Wherever America’s right stuff now elusively resides, its wrong stuff in right-stuff disguise is on display for all the world to see—at multiplexes everywhere, not just on Fox News.
* This though I’m not crazy about: Brain-Eating Parasites Thrive As Global Warming Heats Up U.S. Lakes.
* “People who claim we’re in the sixth mass extinction don’t understand enough about mass extinctions to understand the logical flaw in their argument,” he said. “To a certain extent they’re claiming it as a way of frightening people into action, when in fact, if it’s actually true we’re in a sixth mass extinction, then there’s no point in conservation biology.” But that doesn’t mean we can’t still get there if we all just chip in.
* Number of people serving life in US prisons is surging, new report says.
* US credit card debt to surpass $1 trillion this year, report says.
* A scholar of the Ku Kux Klan explains how the KKK used the same trolling tactics as the alt-right.
* Five officials will face manslaughter charges for Flint water crisis. PA supreme court: was illegal to steal elderly woman’s home because her son sold $140 of weed. Revealed: reality of life working in an Ivanka Trump clothing factory.
* Robot puts all of humanity to shame by achieving perfect score in Ms. Pac-Man.
* This New Museum Imagines a World Where Capitalism Is Dead.
* If there is no real economic recovery forthcoming—and there is not—and if the university cannot be restored without one, do any possibilities remain? They do. We would have to imagine a world that did not peg public funds to private profits. Our current understanding of “public” presupposes a thoroughgoing privatization of the world that shortly preceded the appearance of the modern university. There is no going back. But if there is to be something ahead, an emancipation of learning, it will not be discovered in the hearts and minds of administrators and legislators persuaded to see the error of their ways, but in a transformation of the society beyond the edges of campus. Who Can Save the University?
* For graduate students fighting to unionize, time is running out.
* Today’s horrific fire in London’s Grenfell Tower is a symbol of a deeply unequal United Kingdom.
* Bob Dylan, Nobel Prize Winner.
* Ph’nglui mglw’nafh Cars R’lyeh wgah’nagl fhtagn.
* Why is TV awash in afterlives, hells, and purgatories?
* There’s just one story, and we tell it over and over.
* Witchcraft and dueling are now legal in Canada.
* Abolish the trucking industry.
* Why It Was Easier to Be Skinny in the 1980s.
* Estimated Number of Injuries and Reported Deaths Associated with Inflatable Amusements, 2003-2013.
* Bruce Springsteen is headed to Broadway.
* I’m sorry, I don’t think I understand the objection.
* Presenting the best of Hello from the Magic Tavern.
* What real words are actually valid CSS HEX colors?
* Alarm clock dropped inside wall still going off daily after 13 years.
* Why It’s Impossible to Indict a Cop.
* “Rakka” is the first sci-fi short film by Oats Studios, directed by Neill Blomkamp (District 9 and Chappie), featuring the aftermath of an alien invasion that has enslaved millions of humans. The free 22-minute film, which features the amazing Sigourney Weaver, is available to stream for free on Steam, YouTube and the Oats Studios website.
* And guys, it’s official: I’m a bestseller.
Written by gerrycanavan
June 17, 2017 at 4:27 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #BlackLivesMatter, #TheResistance, academia, academic books, academic writing, actually existing media bias, Adam Sandler, afterlife, AHCA, alt-right, America, America capitalism, artificial intelligence, assassination, authoritarianism, Big Bads, Bill Cosby, Bob Dylan, bosses, bouncy castles, brain-eating parasites, Broadway, Canada, cars, Cars 3, censorship, CFPs, Chip and Dale, civil asset forfeiture, class struggle, climate change, color, comics, Congress, consumer debt, credit card debt, crowdfunding, Cthulhu, democracy, Democrats, demographics, deportation, diets, Disney afternoon, District 9, Donald Trump, DREAM Act, Duck Tales, dueling, ecology, England, fascism, film, fire, Flint, foreclosure, games, GoFundMe, graduate student movements, graduate student unions, graduate students, Great Lakes, Guardians of the Galaxy, hacking, health care, health insurance, Hell, Hello from the Magic Tavern, How the University Works, Hulu, ice, immigration, impeachment, It Can't Happen Here, Ivanka Trump, Jeremy Corbyn, KKK, Labour Party, lead poisoning, lies and lying liars, lifetime limits, Lovecraft, Make America Great Again, Margaret Atwood, Marvel Cinematic Universe, mass extinction, mass incarceration, Michigan, Moby-Dick, movies, music, musicals, Nancy Pelosi, Neill Blomkamp, Netflix, never tell me the odds, nightmares, Nobel Prize, obstruction of justice, Pac-Man, pedagogy, plagiarism, podcasts, police, police violence, politics, pre-existing conditions, prison, prison-industrial complex, public safety, public universities, Purgatory, race, racism, Rakka, rape culture, Republicans, Rescue Rangers, retcons, Robert Mueller, robots, Russia, Salvage, science fiction, self-driving cars, sex, Springsteen, statistics, Steve Scalise, sweatshops, teaching, television, the 1980s, the Cabinet, The Handmaid's Tale, the Left, the Senate, there's just one story and we tell it over and over, totalitarianism, Transformers, trucking, unions, United Kingdom, violence, Vonnegut, war on drugs, water, weight loss, witchcraft, Wonder Woman, writing
Weekend Links! So Many!
* Harris Wittels has died. I really loved his appearances on Earwolf, but the one I keep thinking about is his appearance on “You Made It Weird” last November, where he spoke about his addiction at length. The humblebrag.
* Oliver Sacks writes about his terminal cancer diagnosis in the New York Times.
* The Midwest Interdisciplinary Graduate Conference began today. This year’s theme is “Animacy” and both Lee Edelman and Lauren Berlant are keynotes.
* TNI has a great excerpt from the beginning of Creepiness.
* A President’s Day remembrance of Ona Judge.
* Neill Blomkamp is making an Alien. The Man In The High Castle Gets Series Order From Amazon. Amazon should greenlight this next.
* The City and the City may be a BBC drama. I would have said it was unfilmable, but sure, let’s give it a try.
* Boston’s winter from hell. What the massive snowfall in Boston tells us about global warming.
* A Siberian blast—seriously, this air is from Siberia—has turned the eastern U.S. into an icebox featuring the most extreme cold of anywhere on Earth right now. Looking ahead, there’s plenty more where that came from.
* Rudy Giuliani, still horrible.
* Melodrama is so powerful, then, because by promising heroic emancipation from terrorist villainy, it implies that US citizens can overcome their feelings of diminished political agency and lost freedom. Melodrama promises that both the US state, and individual Americans, will soon experience heroic freedom by winning the War on Terror. They will cast off their feelings of vulnerability and weakness through heroic action—even when the villain they attack is not the primary cause of their powerlessness or suffering.
* The fastest way to find Waldo. You’re welcome.
* Would you like to understand how the “new” Harper Lee novel, “Go Set a Watchman,” came to be billed as a long-lost, blockbuster sequel to “To Kill a Mockingbird” — one of the definitive books of the American 20th century — when, by all the known facts, it’s an uneven first draft of the famous novel that was never considered for publication? Would you like to get a glimpse into how clever marketing and cryptic pronouncements have managed to produce an instant bestseller, months before anyone has read it?
* Republicans think this is their moment to kill higher education in America. And they might be right.
* Congressman Says We Don’t Need Education Funding Because ‘Socrates Trained Plato On A Rock.’ Checks out.
* The outlook for the rest of Illinois isn’t much better. We Need Syriza in Illinois.
* That there are any homeless children anywhere in the country is an unthinkable national tragedy.
* Save the Wisconsin Idea. You may have to save it from its saviors.
* The inexorable tuition explosion that will result is proving to be politically untenable, and Walker has moved immediately to head it off, consequences be damned. And UW leadership, having adopted a posture of supporting the public authority on principled grounds, is left in the politically deadly position of having to fight for the power to raise tuition arbitrarily.
* Meanwhile let’s kill all the state parks too.
* Meanwhile Milwaukee is one of America’s poorest cities. Though it still has one thing going for it.
* “Scott Walker says he consults with God, but his office can’t provide documents to prove it.”
* Ideology Seen as Factor in Closings in University of North Carolina System. No! It can’t be!
* New Education Initiative Replaces K-12 Curriculum With Single Standardized Test.
* The best and worst presidents. The hottest U.S. presidents. The beardiest presidents.
* Mother Jones loves Minnesota governor Mark Dayton.
* The visiting professor scam.
* We don’t need more STEM majors. We need more STEM majors with liberal arts training.
The academic atmosphere, produced mainly by the humanities, is the only atmosphere in which pure science can flourish pic.twitter.com/Y51Vgb7gXq
— StuHum (@StuHum) February 15, 2015
* Academic interviews are horrible, mealtime edition.
* Oklahoma Lawmakers Vote Overwhelmingly To Ban Advanced Placement U.S. History.
* The West Coast cargo strike.
* DWYL, porn industry edition.
* What is going to happen to all of those African-languages-speaking, archive-obsessed, genre-discovering graduate students? Listen, I have some terrible news.
* The death cult called the MLA wants you to have hope for some reason though. Really strange study.
* Florida Passes Plan For Racially-Based Academic Goals.
* Meanwhile, affirmative action for men in college admissions.
* “A Superbug Nightmare Is Playing Out at an LA Hospital.”
* But one of America’s ugliest secrets is that our own whistleblowers often don’t do so well after the headlines fade and cameras recede. The ones who don’t end up in jail like Manning, or in exile like Snowden, often still go through years of harassment and financial hardship. And while we wait to see if Loretta Lynch is confirmed as the next Attorney General, it’s worth taking a look at how whistleblowers in America fared under the last regime.
* Boston Using Prison Labor To Shovel Heaps Of Snow In Frigid Temperatures For Pennies.
* Revealing scenes from the deranged thinking in the tech industry.
* SMBC messing with the primal forces.
* LARoB reviews Kelly Link’s Get in Trouble and Mohamedou Ould Slahi’s Guantánamo Diary and Ms. Marvel, Vol. 1.
* Clarissa Explains White Supremacy.
* Iceland begins to jail bankers.
* “College Apologizes for Way It Gave M&Ms to Children.”
* “Can There Be Too Many Museums?”
* “Which sexual positions are more likely to break your penis?”
* Giant Ron English art-book: Status Factory.
* An excerpt from David Graeber’s The Rules of Utopia.
* Oral histories of the early days of the HIV epidemic.
* National Adjunct Walkout Day is growing near. It’s Time to Review Your Adjunct Employment Policies.
* Trying to create a promotion track outside the tenure stream at Denver.
* The adjunct unionization movement. And more on that.
* Campus cops prepare for National Adjunct Walkout Day.
* Here’s a thing about @OccupyMLA that uses me as its stooge for part of it. Yay?
* Interesting Kickstarter: “Pioneers of African-American Cinema.”
* “DoJ report on Montana justice: Don’t get raped in Missoula, even if you’re only five years old.”
* Justice Department ‘seriously examining’ Ferguson race case.
* Another piece on the rise of the Title IX industry. Provocative Harvard Law Review forum on Title IX overreach. However bad we’re doing, though, we can certainly always do worse.
* Perhaps with each tuition bill, students should receive a breakdown of how their dollars are spent.
* Academic hiring: The Trading Places hypothesis.
* How Arizona State Reinvented Free-Throw Distraction.
* The Oscars and racism. The Oscars and sexism.
* The Brazilian town where the Confederacy lives on.
* DC Comics is bringing back Prez, this time as a teenage girl who gets elected president by Twitter.
* Holding Out For a Heroine: On Being a Woman and Loving Star Wars.
* 10 Worst Misconceptions About Medieval Life You’d Get From Fantasy Books.
* A rare piece from NRO worth linking: The Right-Wing Scam Machine.
* Former Nazi Guard Charged with 170,000 Counts of Accessory to Murder. Take the plea deal!
* The CIA asked me about controlling the climate – this is why we should worry.
* To misappropriate the prophecy of another technological sage: the post-human dystopia is already here; it’s just not evenly distributed yet.
* Mark Bould has another post on Jupiter Ascending trying to wrangle its treatment of gender. Lots of good discussion of Princess Leia here too.
* Plans to whip us up into another invasion in the Middle East are proceeding apace.
* When horrific child abuse becomes quirk.
* Florida police officer: “Planting evidence and lying in your reports are just part of the game.”
* Cuteness in history. Why when you see something cute you (sometimes) want to destroy it.
* Another Reason To Worry About The Measles.
* Wearable Workplace “Mood Monitors” Are About To Become A Thing.
* A People’s History of Franklin.
* Asexuals and Demisexuals in Wired.
* Five-alarm nerd alert: Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality has begun its final arc.
* Settlers of Catan: The Movie.
* And in case that’s not enough here’s some more proof we as a nation are still capable of great things.
I just found out that @BigBird is the ONLY PERSON on Twitter who can see @MrSnuffleupagus. This is a goddamn triumph. pic.twitter.com/KT2QuUifj2
— Mia Bee (@im_a_mia) February 19, 2015
Written by gerrycanavan
February 20, 2015 at 11:37 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic interviews, academic jobs, Adam Kotsko, addiction, affirmative action, Africa, Alien, Amazon, America, American exceptionalism, AP History, apocalypse, Apple, art, asexualism, austerity, bankers, Barack Obama, BBC, Bechdel test, Big Bird, Black Arts Movement, blizzards, books, Boston, Brazil, Bruce Rauner, bureaucracy, Burger King, cancer, Charlie Brown, charts, child abuse, CIA, Clarissa, class struggle, climate change, comedy, Comedy Bang Bang, comics, cop shows, creepiness, cultural preservation, cuteness, David Graeber, DC Comics, demisexualism, do what you love, dogs, drugs, dystopia, Earwolf, East Coast, ecology, Ed Balls, Eliezer Yudkowsky, English departments, epidemics, fantasy, film, Florida, Franklin, games, gender, geo-engineering, George Washington, Go Set a Watchman, God, Greece, Guantánamo, guns, Harper Lee, Harris Wittels, Harry Potter, Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality, historically black colleges, HIV and AIDS, homeland security, homelessness, How the University Works, humblebrag, Iceland, ideology, Illinois, ISIS, journalism school, Kelly Link, Lauren Berlant, Lee Edelman, liberal arts, LOLapocalypse, Los Angeles, Los Angeles Review of Books, M&Ms, Madison, management, Mark Dayton, measles, medicine, medievalism, melancholy, Miami, Middle East, Midwest Interdisciplinary Graduate Conference, Milwaukee, Minnesota, misogyny, MLA, Mohamedou Ould Slahi, Mr. Snuffleupagus, Ms. Marvel, Muppets, museums, Neill Blomkamp, neoliberalism, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oliver Sacks, Ona Judge, Oscars, Peanuts, penises, Philadelphia, Philip K. Dick, Plato, podcasts, police corruption, politics, pornography, poverty, Presidents, Prez, Princess Leia, prison labor, prison-industrial complex, quirk, race, racism, real estate, Republicans, Ron English, Rudy Giuliani, Samuel Beckett, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science fiction, Scott Walker, segregation, Sesame Street, Settlers of Catan, sex, sexism, snow, Socrates, standardized testing, Star Wars, state parks, STEM, summer, superbugs, Syriza, technopositivity, television, tenure, The City and the City, the cold, the Confederacy, the Holocaust, the humanities, The Man in the High Castle, The New Inquiry, The Rules of Utopia, the Wachowskis, To Kill a Mockingbird, transmisogyny, transphobia, true crime, tuition, Twitter, University of Wisconsin, Waldo, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on education, war on terror, West Coast, whistleblowing, white supremacy, winter, Wisconsin, You Made It Weird
Weekend Links!
* The commentators calling $3,000 salaries evil a century ago would have an aneurysm at the sight of coaching contracts today. Deadspin found last year that college football coaches were the highest-paid state employees in twenty-seven states. (Basketball coaches held that status in another thirteen.) The salary inflation is a direct product of increasing college sports revenue, thanks in large part to massive television deals. Because the colleges and their athletic departments are nonprofit, they need to spend the money they bring in, and since they can’t pay players, there are only so many places that money can go. Head coaches and other athletic staffers are direct beneficiaries.
* My Favorite Graph of 2014: The Rise and Rise of the Top 0.1 Percent.
* Americans Have Spent Enough Money On A Broken Plane To Buy Every Homeless Person A Mansion.
* Elsewhere in the richest society ever in the history of the world.
* David Harvey and Leo Panitch: Beyond Impossible Reform and Improbable Revolution.
* North Korea, Sony, and stenography.
* The successful attempt to reduce fat in the diet of Americans and others around the world has been a global, uncontrolled experiment, which like all experiments may well have led to bad outcomes. What’s more, it has initiated a further set of uncontrolled global experiments that are continuing. Editorial in the British Medical Journal.
* A new study from Stanford looks at what happened in Italy, when a 1961 law doubled the number of students in STEM majors graduating from the country’s universities.
* …when people claim that the “free market” system outproduced Soviet Communism, what they are saying is that markets more effectively produced discipline. It was more successful at imposing patterns of human action and restriction conducive to military and economic production than a command economy was capable of imposing.
* “Why Is My Curriculum White?”
* If Tom Joad is alive after 1945, what is his future? Am I the only who sees him becoming a conservative like most of his fellow ex-sharecropper migrants and voting for Goldwater in 64? Grapes of Wrath fanfic at LGM.
* Neill Blomkamp’s Secret Alien Movie Looks So Good We’re Furious.
* Math Suggests Most Cancers Are Caused By “Bad Luck.”
* Florida: We’re The Worst. Arizona: Not So Fast.
* And then there’s Wisconsin. Pregnant woman challenging Wisconsin protective custody law.
At the clinic, a urine test showed Loertscher was pregnant, and also revealed her past drug use. Another test confirmed she had a severe thyroid condition.
Medical officials shared the findings with the county social services personnel, who subsequently went to court and had a guardian ad litem appointed for Loertscher’s 14-week-old fetus.
Social workers asked Loertscher repeatedly to release her medical records to county officials, and said that if she didn’t, she would be jailed until she had her baby, which would then be put up for adoption.
* Is the Gates Foundation Still Investing in Private Prisons?
* UNC-Chapel Hill Firing Professor Over Academic Fraud Scandal.
* Lines mankind was never meant to cross: LEGO Awarded 3D Printing Patent, May Allow Users to Print Own Bricks.
* The NYPD is Ironically Proving that Most of Their Police Work is Completely Unnecessary. The Benefits of Fewer NYPD Arrests.
* And Traci Reardon and J.W. Stillwater have a good old fashioned New Year’s Sentiment Off.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 3, 2015 at 8:53 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 3D printing, academia, actually existing media bias, Adam Kotsko, Alabama, Alien, America, Arizona, austerity, bad luck, Barry Goldwater, Bill Gates, cancer, class struggle, Coach K, college basketball, college football, college sports, Comedy Bang Bang, David Harvey, democracy, diets, ethnic studies, film, Florida, food, free markets, Gates Foundation, hacking, Handmaid's Tale, health care, homelessness, How the University Works, Italy, just raise taxes, kids today, LEGO, low fat, Margaret Atwood, marriage equality, math, military-industrial complex, NCAA, Neill Blomkamp, neoliberalism, New York, North Korea, NYPD, Okies, pedagogy, podcasts, police, police state, politics, pregnancy, prison, prison-industrial complex, race, racism, revolution, riots, scandals, science fiction, sentiment off, Sony, STEM, syllabi, teaching, the courts, The Grapes of Wrath, The Interview, the law, the rich are different from you and me, the richest nation in the history of the world, the wisdom of markets, Tom Joad, Twitter, UNC, Wisconsin
Friday Night Linkdump
* The future’s already here, it’s just not evenly distributed: “Dizzy and sick”: McDonald’s workers strike after enduring 110 degree heat.
* Richest 300 Persons on Earth Have More Money Than Poorest 3 Billion.
* Neill Blomkamp hypes Elysium.
* Jimmy Carter Says NSA Scandal Shows America Has No Functioning Democracy.
* Detroit declares bankruptcy. The U.S. cities that have filed for bankruptcy, in one map. Only Wall Street Wins in Detroit Crisis Reaping $474 Million Fee. Race and ethnicity 2010: Detroit.Robots, Race, Globalization and the 1%. Dirty tricks from Governor Snyder.But not so fast.
* After Trayvon: Will There Be Justice for Florida’s Other Stand Your Ground Victim?
* On Twitter, Jim Henley suggested that we view these laws as a variation on deputization — but it’s a weirdly open-ended form, a kind of freelance self-deputization. It’s recruiting potentially every white male (along with everyone who identifies culturally with the white male power structure over against minority groups) to appoint himself a police deputy and join in the ongoing war on minorities that we euphemistically call “law enforcement” in this country.
* More details on San Jose State’s rejection of MOOCs: University Suspends Online Classes After More Than Half the Students Fail.
* Tufts adjuncts file for union. 6 Current Players Join Antitrust Lawsuit Against The NCAA.
* Megan Erickson in Jacobin against unschooling. Gary Cohn at Firedoglake against colocation.
* Sequestration Cuts To Research ‘Like A Slowly Growing Cancer.’
* Texas Monthly profiles Wendy Davis and the Democrats’ fight to flip Texas.
* Five-year-old shoots two-year-old sister dead with “My First Rifle.”
* Scientists have found the biggest viruses known, and these pandoraviruses have opened up entirely new questions in science—even suggesting a fourth domain of life, a new study says.
* Death and dying in America: 1, 2.
* Save the Cat! Why Every Hollywood Movie is Exactly the Same.
Written by gerrycanavan
July 19, 2013 at 5:52 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, America, austerity, automation, Barack Obama, charter schools, class struggle, climate change, collapse, college sports, death, Detroit, District 9, dying, ecology, Elysium, emerging Democratic majority, film, flexible accumulation, Florida, George Zimmerman, Greece, guns, Hollywood, How the University Works, Jimmy Carter, kids today, McDonald's, MOOCs, NCAA, Neill Blomkamp, neoliberalism, NSA, politics, race, rich people, San Jose State, Save the Cat!, science, science fiction, sequestration, stand your ground, strikes, Texas, the law, Trayvon Martin, Tufts, unions, unschooling, viruses, Wall Street, war on education, welcome to the future, Wendy Davis, Won't somebody think of the children?
Wednesday!
* Duke’s Jebediah Purdy has the solution to the problem of animal-rights muckrakers I blogged about yesterday:
Fairness and safety are real issues. So is transparency, and that is why we should require confined-feeding operations and slaughterhouses to install webcams at key stages of their operations. List the URL’s to the video on the packaging. There would be no need for human intrusion into dangerous sites. No tricky angles or scary edits by activists. Just the visual facts. If the operators felt their work misrepresented, they could add cameras to give an even fuller picture.
On what grounds could the slaughterhouse industry possibly object to that? Via DotEarth’s post on the personhood of non-humans.
* All told, over the last five fiscal years, the Education Department has generated $101.8 billion in profit from student borrowers, thanks to low borrowing costs for the government and fixed interest rates for students, budget documents show.
* Student loan interest rates are scheduled to double on July 1, from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent. Congress extended the lower rate on federal student loans for a year in an effort to control the nation’s formidable student debt crisis, but will now have to decide whether or not to cancel the interest rate hike once again. Interests Diverge on Interest Rates.
* Every meaningful resistance to neoliberalism must be a feminism.
* Now, however, the City College of San Francisco might pay a heavy price for its faculty-oriented ethos: being shut down.
* The L.A. Times pans the New University of California.
* Millions of Americans have grown up with a defining family immigration story. But while our families may have endured hardship coming to America, the simple fact is that most of our immigration stories would not be possible at all under today’s immigration laws. Great idea for a site.
* The 2012 VIDA statistics have been out for some time now, so I won’t linger over the current and quantifiable inequity—yes, even in this magazine—in the frequency with which male and female writers are reviewed today, five years after the past was deemed “gone.” It’s a proven fact, backed by simple math even my first grader can understand: the number of reviews of books by men is greater than the number of reviews of books by women; the number of male reviewers is greater than the number of female reviewers. Men, in other words, are still the arbiters of taste, the cultural gatekeepers, and the recipients of what little attention still gets paid to books.
* Scenes from the class struggle in the future: Neill Blomkamp’s Elysium.
* Animated Renderings of America After 25 Feet of Sea Level Rise.
* They f*ck you up, your mum and dad. / They may not mean to, but they do.
* Trends in Instructional Staff Employment Status, 1975-2011.
* And xkcd considers the mise-en-Adobe.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 10, 2013 at 4:48 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic jobs, Adobe, animal cruelty, animal rights, animals, books, California, charts, City College of San Francisco, class struggle, climate change, ecology, Elysium, feminism, flexible online degrees, How the University Works, immigration, journalism, Los Angeles, Margaret Thatcher, meat, misogyny, MOOCs, Neill Blomkamp, neoliberalism, North Carolina, parasites, parents, personhood, politics, science fiction, sexism, socialism, student debt, tenure, time-lapse, transparency, vegetarianism, women, xkcd
Weekend Links
* Science fiction in Africa: Here’s a 23-minute BBC World Service documentary about science fiction in Africa, hosted by Zoo City author Lauren Beukes, who speaks to various luminaries, writers and commentators, including District 9 creator Neill Blomkamp.
* Emily Yoffe: I was sexually assaulted three times before I was 20. Here’s why I never told my family or the police.
* So you’ve decided to make a Sandusky prison rape joke.
* Tim Kreider wants you to like A.I.
* We need to recognize that the tax cutters were snake oil salesmen, the Federal Reserve an enabler of damaging debts and that bilateral trade deals are written of, by and for global financiers, not workers. To paraphrase the Huey Lewis song, we need a new policy.
* Sorkin’s ‘Newsroom’ Is No Place For Optimism.
* When you touch goo, you shouldn’t have gloves on you: science training from the Weyland Corporation.
* And just because it’s Saturday: some recent photos of my daughter, for people who love things that are adorable…
Written by gerrycanavan
June 23, 2012 at 10:46 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with Aaron Sorkin, Africa, Cookie Monster, District 9, fairy tales, film, Kubrick, Lauren Beukes, Muppets, Neill Blomkamp, Newsroom, Penn State, prison-industrial complex, Prometheus, rape culture, science, science fiction, sexual assault, Steven Spielberg, torture, very late capitalism, What could possibly go wrong?, Zoey
The 11
Reverse Shot’s 11 Offenses of 2009. (500) Days of Summer and District 9 both make appearances. Via Dan H.
Even if we buy this conceit (derived from The Outer Limits’ episode “The Architects of Fear”), Blomkamp’s usage of brutal, menacing Nigerian gang bangers as secondary villains—gun-runners who antagonize both the country’s “Prawn” population and bumbling Afrikaner pencil pusher turned alien mutant Wikus van der Mewe (Sharto Copley)—suggests he’s not above the propagation of stereotypes. And it would be easier to take Wikus’s symbolically loaded transformation into the Other (which begins when he’s accidentally sprayed by some bug fluid during a ghetto raid) seriously if it wasn’t ultimately a pretense for his being able to operate the aliens’ biochemical weaponry—a development that allows District 9 to abandon its thin veneer of social commentary (and erratically deployed faux-documentary textures) to become the live-action Halo shoot-em-up its creator wanted to make all along.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 8, 2010 at 10:55 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with (500) Days of Summer, 2009, District 9, film, Neill Blomkamp
Another Massive Wednesday Linkdump
* Three-part interview at Hero Complex with Neill Blomkamp.
GB: There can be an interesting freedom in the restrictions, too, even though that sounds contradictory. If you look at “Jaws” and “Alien,” the limitations on the visual effects led to ingenuity and better films. And there are many films today that go wild with visual effects and it leads to entirely forgettable films.
NB: It’s so true. From a pure audience perspective, it may yield a more interesting result. Think of “Alien,” if they made it now you would probably get “Alien vs. Predator.”
Via MeFi, which also links to another Blomkamp short, Tempbot.
* Noah Sheldon photographs the degradation of Biosphere 2. Also via MeFi. More photos at BLDGBLOG.
* China Miéville is blogging a rejectamentalist manifesto.
* “The End of the Detroit Dream.”
* Infinite Summer 2 is coming: 2666 Spring.
* Democrats would gain 10 Senate seats by eliminating the filibuster.
* The Big Bang Theory vs. The Male Gaze.
* New Yorker fiction by the numbers.
The first thing we always look at is if the New Yorker is bringing new writers into the mix or sticking with its old standbys. Just 10 writers account for 82 (or 23%) of the 358 stories to appear over the last seven years. Just 18 writers account for 124 (or 35%) of the stories. The New Yorker is sometimes criticized for featuring the same writers again and again, but it appears to be getting better on this front. The 18 “standbys” noted above and listed below accounted for only 7 of the 49 stories published in 2009 (or 14%). On the flip side of this argument, 15 writers appeared in the New Yorker for the first time in 2009 (at least since 2003).
* Monkeys recognize bad grammar. But they still can’t spell.
* Andrew Sullivan has your charts of the day.
It looks as though traditional economists have a strong optimism bias, which I try to balance with my fervent belief that the economy will catastrophically collapse on any given day.
* io9 considers the inevitable Lost reboot.
* I’m starting the new year with the sinking feeling that important opportunities are slipping from the nation’s grasp. Our collective consciousness tends to obsess indiscriminately over one or two issues — the would-be bomber on the flight into Detroit, the Tiger Woods saga — while enormous problems that should be engaged get short shrift.
….This is a society in deep, deep trouble and the fixes currently in the works are in no way adequate to the enormous challenges we’re facing.
So Yemen’s population has tripled since 1975 and will double again by 2035. Meanwhile, state revenue will decline to zero by 2017 and the capital city of Sanaa will run out of water by 2015 — partly because 40% of Sanaa’s water is pumped illegally in the outskirts to irrigate the qat crop.
* Goal of the week: Dempsey!
Written by gerrycanavan
January 6, 2010 at 10:34 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 2666, Biosphere 2, blogs, charts, China Miéville, Democrats, Detroit, District 9, economics, fiction, film, Infinite Summer, language, Lost, male gaze, marriage equality, monkeys, Neill Blomkamp, New Yorker, optimism, Ozymandias, pessimism, photographs, politics, reboots, Roberto Bolaño, ruins, soccer, television, Tempbot, The Big Bang Theory, the filibuster, the Senate, writing, Yemen
Six for Wednesday Night
More regular and substantive blogging returns January 2. For now, a few links:
* A chart at Pharyngula ranks the states by religiosity. Congratulations, New Hampshire & Vermont!
* Hero Complex interviews Neill Blomkamp.
* Boing Boing has your census of the dead.
* Barack Obama is far and away the most admired man in America. For admired women, Hillary Clinton only manages to beat out Sarah Palin by a meager 1%.
* The 9th Circuit says you can sue the police for improper Tasering.
Written by gerrycanavan
December 30, 2009 at 11:52 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with America, Barack Obama, death, Hillary Clinton, Neill Blomkamp, New Hampshire, police state, polls, religion, Sarah Palin, science fiction, soccer, tasers, Vermont, World Cup
Friday Friday
Friday!
* The ping-pong match in the press over the public option continues. Nobody can figure out whether or not Pelosi has the votes, whether or not Obama supports an Olympia-Snowe-style trigger, or just what will happen with the cloture vote in the Senate. Ezra Klein compares the likely House and Senate bills, which leads Matt Yglesias to suggest a best-of-both-worlds approach. Meanwhile a Daily Kos/Research 2000 poll shows that public support for the public option remains steady at around 60%, which would be important if the Senate were a properly representative body.
* Lots of buzz today about Neill Blomkamp’s next film after District 9, described by SCI FI Wire as a balls-out sci-fi epic.
* ‘A Mid-Atlantic Miracle’: Keeping public university costs down in Maryland.
* A judge has ruled the war crimes case against Blackwater/Xe will go forward.
* ‘Living on $500,000 a Year‘: Reading F. Scott Fitzgerald’s tax returns. John Scalzi compares Fitzgerald’s income and lifestyle to a writer’s today.
* Fox News CEO Roger Ailes for president? This would take “fair and balanced” to a whole new level.
* And your entirely random chart of the day: The Population of Rome Through History. Via Kottke.
Written by gerrycanavan
October 23, 2009 at 6:16 pm
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged with academia, balls-out sci-fi epics, Blackwater, District 9, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Fox News, health care, Maryland, Nancy Pelosi, Neill Blomkamp, Olympia Snowe, politics, polls, public option, Rome, science fiction, the filibuster, the Senate, war crimes, writing