Posts Tagged ‘Pee Wee Herman’
Feeling a Little Coronavirusty — Links
* This Twitter thread on the Imperial College modeling calling for 18 months or more of suppressive action was some of the most bracing reading on coronavirus I’ve seen yet. (This Buzzfeed article has a summary if that’s more your speed.) We are living through a nightmare. We’re not going back to normal. (UDPATE: Here’s a critique of the Imperial College study that got a lot of people spooked, including me, arguing that a few weeks of lockdown plus contact tracing and monitoring *can* prevent reemergence of the outbreak.)
* How long will social distancing for coronavirus have to last? Deciphering the pandemic: a guide to understanding the coronavirus numbers. How the US stacks up to other countries in confirmed coronavirus cases. The Single Most Important Lesson From the 1918 Influenza.
* 18% have lost jobs or hours in the last month. You Should Be Absolutely Terrified About the Economy. A Frantic Few Days for Restaurants Is Only the Beginning. Baseball Shutdown Sends Minor Leaguers Into Uncertain Future. The World of Books Braces for a Newly Ominous Future. Amazon’s Supply Chain Is Breaking and Small Businesses Are Screwed. There’s no one to pick the fruit. As Coronavirus Deepens Inequality, Inequality Worsens Its Spread. It Has All Gone to Hell. Coronavirus is an indictment of our way of life. America is a sham. Big Pharma is ready.
Unemployment claims filed in Ohio:
Last Sunday: 536
This Sunday: 11,995
Monday: 36,645For tens of thousands of Ohioans the economic crisis is already here. We should have already voted on the House-passed bill.https://t.co/xCAUPzhgGW
— Sherrod Brown (@SenSherrodBrown) March 18, 2020
* To stop a coronavirus quarantine recession, economists say send everyone cash—now. Romney! Dem Senators! Bernie Sanders Proposal for $2 Trillion Coronavirus Emergency Plan Includes $2,000 Direct Monthly Payments to Every American. He’ll just have to beat the Democrats to do it.
I was trying to figure out why this point wasn’t absolutely obvious to people but finally realized the point of the utterance is “blah blah blah blah I don’t need a check” https://t.co/K6gk4kg7Wq
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) March 17, 2020
Haunted by family legends of great-grandparents who lost the stock to save the house, which they then lost anyway, or maybe it was the other way around, the point is they lost everything
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) March 16, 2020
We can only exist where capitalism is not. And this crisis is opening up such spaces. The question is whether it becomes a way to get back to "normal," or whether it wakes us up that "normal" wants us dead.
— Adam Kotsko (@adamkotsko) March 16, 2020
banal point but it’s moments like this you realize our entire society is based on one premise: spend or die
— Quinn Slobodian (@zeithistoriker) March 16, 2020
* First confirmed patient in R.I. talks about surviving coronavirus. A Frontline Physician Speaks Out on the Coronavirus.
* Evers orders bars, restaurants closed; schools closed indefinitely. Vegas shuts down. Then: Spring breakers pack Florida beach despite coronavirus pandemic. Now: $6 flights to Fort Lauderdale.
* New York Is Now the Epicenter of the Coronavirus Crisis in the U.S. New York Will Be The Next Italy, But Doesn’t Have to Be.
Jerry's girlfriend demands to know if they're at "quarantine level"; George and Elaine pretend to date to get around the Uber pool ban; Kramer pretends to be an epidemiologist on twitter and gets retweeted by the President etc etc https://t.co/ZyHk2W1lWI
— Eric Lach (@ericlach) March 17, 2020
* They Went Off the Grid. They Came Back to the Coronavirus.
* COVID-19 and Collective Childcare.
* Before Trump’s inauguration, a warning: ‘The worst influenza pandemic since 1918.’ How Trump snapped out of coronavirus delusion mode. The Mar-a-Lago hot zone. Priorities. With masks at the ready, ICE agents make arrests on first day of California coronavirus lockdown.
* Some good news: Ventilator Maker: We Can Ramp Up Production Five-Fold. Coronavirus vaccine test opens with 1st doses. New cases and deaths in Italy may have reached their plateau.
* Isis issues coronavirus travel advice: terrorists should avoid Europe.
* Student advocates say coronavirus-related directives to move off campus threaten to reinforce existing inequalities and put disproportionate burdens on low-income and international students, among others. Why not simply make your online courses as human as possible? Coronavirus and the ruptured narrative of campus life.
* Social media giants warn of AI moderation errors as coronavirus empties offices. Coronavirus Is Changing Podcasting, Fast.
* Now is the time to overreact.
* …a properly dialectical critique does not criticise the reality of capitalism for failing to live up to its ideals; it criticises the ideals of capitalism for their, more or less hidden, reflection of that reality. What a dialectical critique shows is that better things aren’t possible, if we index possibilities to what appears possible according to the world as it is. But what it also shows is that better things are not only necessary, but real: a better world does not exist in the thwarted ideals of the present, but in the real processes that might abolish that present.
* Planet Plastic: How Big Oil and Big Soda kept a global environmental calamity a secret for decades. The Mad Men of Climate Denial. Coronavirus Lockdown May Save More Lives By Preventing Pollution Than By Preventing Infection. Welcome to the LEGOpocene.
* Chindogu are inventions that defy concise explanation. They aren’t useful. But they aren’t completely useless either. Their creator, Kenji Kawakami, describes them as “un-useless.” The Ten Tenets of Chindogu.
* The Rise of Impossibly Cute and Wholesome Games.
* Joe Biden has now essentially won the Democratic nomination. Ugh.
* Wrestlemania in a time of coronavirus.
* And Friday can’t get here fast enough. Save us, Nintendo!
Written by gerrycanavan
March 18, 2020 at 8:02 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 1918, academia, America, Animal Crossing, capitalism, childcare, chindogu, class struggle, climate change, college, coronavirus, Democratic primary 2020, Donald Trump, ecology, epidemic, Facebook, games, Grand Canyon, How the University Works, inventions, ISIS, Italy, Joe Biden, kids today, Mar-a-Lago, moderation, New York, Nintendo, off the grid, pandemic, parenting, Pee Wee Herman, podcasts, politics, professional wrestling, quarantine, revolution, Second Great Depression?, Seinfeld, social distancing, social media, Spanish flu, terrorism, the economy, UBI, unemployment, vaccines, Wisconsin, worst financial crisis since the last one, Wrestlemania
Wednesday Links!
* Call for Papers, UWM/Marquette Graduate Student Humanities Conference: “Conflict and Liberation.”
* Call for Papers: Posthuman Futures.
* Your SF short film of the week: “Stealing Time.”
Fail safe systems in the weapons mostly worked
Uh, mostly?
and none of the four bombs experienced a nuclear reaction upon impact, sparing the region and its hundreds of inhabitants from multiple nuclear blasts that would’ve dwarfed the explosion over Hiroshima. “Only a fortunate stroke of luck saved the Spanish population of the area from catastrophe,” a Soviet official said at the time.
well that’s good
But the conventional high explosives on two of the bombs did detonate, essentially turning those weapons into dirty bombs that blasted plutonium radiation across the countryside.
oh
* Democracy, Disposability, and the Flint Water Crisis.
Local, regional, and state governments are removing the basic, infrastructural supports that are necessary for the reproduction of life. As a consequence, residents of cities like Flint and Detroit, in particular black and immigrant populations, have been subjected to increasing vulnerability in forms like declining life expectancy and appalling infant mortality. “Disposability” and “surplus population” sound like abstract concepts, but they’re a tangible, visceral reality for folks on the ground in Flint. “We’re like disposable people here,” one resident told the Toronto Star the other day. “We’re not even human here, I guess.”
* Detroit’s Teachers Want You to See These Disturbing Photos of Their Toxic Schools.
* The Color of Surveillance: What an infamous abuse of power teaches us about the modern spy era.
* This is the exam from a class that MLK taught at Morehouse in the early 1960s.
* So you want to read Infinite Jest.
* These 11 laws are what keep space from becoming the wild west.
* America’s Other Original Sin.
* The rising death rates for those young white adults, ages 25 to 34, make them the first generation since the Vietnam War years of the mid-1960s to experience higher death rates in early adulthood than the generation that preceded it.
* Even Insured Can Face Crushing Medical Debt, Study Finds. ‘I Am Drowning.’ The Voices of People With Medical Debt.
* The Nation: Bernie Sanders for President.
* And in anti-endorsements: Sanders and Reparations. Rejecting Bourgeois Feminism.
* Jay Edidin on his recent top surgery.
* HBO to air the rarely seen Godfather Epic cutting Parts I and II together.
* Tennis match fixing: Evidence of suspected match-fixing revealed.
* “Someone in Florida had made a second-mortgage loan to O.J. Simpson, and I just about blew my top, because there was this huge judgment against him from his wife’s parents,” she recalled. Simpson had been acquitted of killing his wife Nicole and her friend but was later found liable for their deaths in a civil lawsuit; that judgment took precedence over other debts, such as if Simpson defaulted on his WaMu loan.
“When I asked how we could possibly foreclose on it, they said there was a letter in the file from O.J. Simpson saying ‘the judgment is no good, because I didn’t do it.’”
* “The One Weird Trait That Predicts Whether You’re a Trump Supporter.” Weird! Kooky! Zany!
* “In Oklahoma, now the country’s earthquake capital…”
* Steven Moffat reveals the BBC almost canceled Doctor Who in 2009.
* Young People Used These Absurd Little Cards to Get Laid in the 19th Century.
* A major new finding about the impact of having a dad who was drafted to Vietnam.
* Former Nazi Medical Orderly to Stand Trial for Deaths of 3,681 People at Auschwitz.
* Writing is hard: “Shut up, Wesley!” did irreparable damage to Wesley Crusher’s role in TNG.
* Unbreakable! They alive, damnit!
* Why Is Sperm So Damn Expensive?
* A 120,000-Piece Lego Model of the Titanic Breaking in Half.
* The Illegitimacy of Aragorn’s Claim to the Throne.
Given that the Númenoreans ruined their civilization to the point that it was personally destroyed by God Himself, the Gondorrim probably shouldn’t have been so quick to crown a long-lived, pure-blooded Númenorean like Aragorn. They’d probably have been better off elevating Pippin Took to the throne. Hobbits at least dally with the good things in life: hearty food, heady ales, fireworks, and weed.
* I don’t know why I’ll watch basically anything involving Pee Wee Herman, but.
* ‘Man flu’ is real. I’m taking the month off.
* Synergy killed the Fantastic Four.
* The Weird Way That Standing (Not Walking) on Escalators Helps Move People More Quickly.
* Race and gifted and talented programs.
* News you can use from the Financial Post: Here’s how to crush student activists once they become your employee.
* The genetic breakthrough that could change humanity, explained.
* Is it still possible to get away with a heist?
Written by gerrycanavan
January 20, 2016 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, aliens, America, Aragorn, architecture, Auschwitz, austerity, authoritarianism, Bernie Sanders, books, CFPs, conferences, corporate synergy, CRISPR, debt, Democratic primary 2016, Detroit, dirty bombs, disability, Donald Trump, drugs, earthquakes, escalators, Fantastic Four, FBI, female circumcision, feminism, film, final frontier, Flint, Florida, gambling, gas prices, genetics, gifted and talented, grading, health insurance, Hillary Clinton, history, How did we survive the Cold War?, Huntington's disease, hydrofracking, Infinite Jest, Infinite Winter, kids today, Kimmy Schmidt, lead, lead poisoning, LEGO, Lord of the Rings, man flu, Marquette, Marvel, megastructures, Michigan, misogyny, MLK, monarchy, mortality, mortgage crisis, Native American issues, Nazi, neoliberalism, Netflix, nineteenth century, nonviolence, nuclear weapons, nuclearity, O.J. Simpson, oil, Oklahoma, outer space, Pee Wee Herman, physics, posthumanism, protest, race, racism, reparations, science fiction, sex, sexism, short film, sick woman theory, slavery, Spain, sperm, Star Trek, surveillance society, teaching, television, tennis, the courts, the draft, the flu, The Godfather, the law, the Titanic, the truth is out there, time travel, TNG, Tolkien, transgender issues, true crime, Utopia, UWM, Vietnam, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on education, water, what year is it, Won't somebody think of the children?
I Would Absolutely, 100% Watch a Version of The Dark Knight Rises with Pee Wee Herman Playing Every Role
Written by gerrycanavan
July 12, 2012 at 4:38 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with Batman, Pee Wee Herman, The Dark Knight Rises
Playing Catchup
* Signs of the apocalypse: Judd Apatow Brewing Up New Pee Wee Herman Movie.
* I confess I’ve been fascinated by the revelation that the Research 2000 polling agency has apparently committed fraud against Daily Kos. There’s loads of additional coverage on this at Nate Silver’s site.
* Did global warming start 150,000 years ago?
* This American Life Completes Documentation Of Liberal, Upper-Middle-Class Existence.
* The 24 Types of Libertarians.
* And because Ben Nelson is a terrible human being, 1.2 million Americans will lose unemployment benefits this Saturday.
Written by gerrycanavan
July 2, 2010 at 12:53 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with Ben Nelson, climate change, Daily Kos, film, fraud, Judd Apatow, libertarians, Nate Silver, Pee Wee Herman, politics, polls, the Senate, This American Life, unemployment, woolly mammoths