Posts Tagged ‘Philip Seymour Hoffman’
Monday Morning Links Are Visible from Space
* The schedule for the next four weeks of my Cultural Preservation course is up at the course blog. Benjamin! Fight Club! Ani DiFranco! Oh my!
* Half of Sexual Abuse Claims in American Prisons Involve Guards, Study Says. Nearly 10 percent of inmates suffer sexual abuse.
* Black Chicago Residents Are 10 Times More Likely To Be Shot By Police Than White Residents. What could explain it?
* The comeback of guaranteed basic income. Alive in the Sunshine.
* David Graeber: What’s the Point If We Can’t Have Fun?
* After Tyrone Hayes said that a chemical was harmful, its maker pursued him.
* On Glimpsing Heat from Alien Technologies.
* ICE/ISEE-3 to return to an Earth no longer capable of speaking to it.
* That “distressed baby” who Tim Armstrong blamed for benefit cuts? She’s my daughter. Armstrong could have paid for the full “cost” of both the babies directly out of his own salary and still made ten million dollars that year (in base salary).
* Dylan Farrow Responds to Woody Allen: “I Have Never Wavered.” 10 Undeniable Facts About the Woody Allen Sexual-Abuse Allegation. Just the Facts . Brainwashing Woody.
* What would Middle Earth look like from space?
* South Bronx Students May Have Found Site of Slave Burial Ground.
* I think about the ways to address people who think computers are magic, and there’s lots of them, the ways I mean although there are also lots of people sufficiently baffled by their own phones to presume that physical laws SHIT LIKE TIME AND SPACE don’t apply to digitization projects…
* “The legislation is almost certainly unconstitutional, it’s a bad law, and it reinforces stereotypes about Jewish influence,” said one pro-Israel Democratic strategist familiar with the groups’ thinking. “It’s so bad that AIPAC and ADL oppose it.”
* At long last, the purges begin at Occupy Wall Street.
* No one likes Obama’s terrible college rankings.
* Concerned with growing class sizes, teaching assistant union files complaint against UC.
* Renowned science fiction writer Kim Stanley Robinson, author of the award-winning “Mars Trilogy,” will select the winners of a national flash-science fiction contest co-organized by Wisconsin Public Radio’s nationally syndicated show “To the Best of Our Knowledge” and the Center for the Humanities and Wisconsin Institute for Discovery at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Gates “Beverly Crusher” McFadden will produce the scripts for radio.
* The Truman Show as eldercare: ‘Dementia Village’ – as it has become known — is a place where residents can live a seemingly normal life, but in reality are being watched all the time. Caretakers staff the restaurant, grocery store, hair salon and theater — although the residents don’t always realize they are carers — and are also watching in the residents’ living quarters.
* The Squalid Grace of Flappy Bird.
* The prohibition and attempted eradication of drugs can be a nightmare for the climate and environment. Particularly in Latin America, the fight against drug production has led to deforestation, widespread contamination with toxic chemicals, and contributed to a warming climate. Meanwhile: Climate Change Comes for Your Cup of Tea.
* I used to be a good teacher.
* Ideology at its purest: Saying it needed to prevent inbreeding, the Copenhagen Zoo killed a 2-year-old giraffe and fed its remains to lions as visitors watched.
* Scientists Think They Have Found The Mythical ‘Sunstone’ Vikings Used To Navigate Warships.
* 11 Alarming Weather Flukes That Happen When it Gets Really Cold.
* The Way We Live Now, by David Brooks.
* The worst people in the world: Four Long Island workers arrested for running ‘developmentally disabled fight club.’
* Sports Corner! How will news that Michael Sam is gay affect his NFL draft stock? 10 Points About College Hoops All-American Marcus Smart’s Pushing a ‘Fan.’ Why Superfan Jeff Orr Is A Much Bigger Problem For College Basketball Than Marcus Smart. More details on the Raiders’ cheerleaders wage theft suit. Olympic Committee Supports Russia’s Arrest of LGBT Activists. Why the Olympics Are a Lot Like ‘The Hunger Games.’ Detroit’s Unrealized Olympic Dreams. Only six of the previous 19 Winter Olympics host cities would be suitable to host the Games again by the end of this century due to warming temperatures, according to a new analysis. And The George Zimmerman-DMX Fight Has Been Cancelled, So At Least There’s That.
* How Crowdworkers Became the Ghosts in the Digital Machine.
* New York State has roughly 15,000 zombie homes and leads the nation in the time required to foreclose on a home, at almost three years, according to data from RealtyTrac, a company that tracks troubled properties.
* If you’ve been wondering how Mockingjay will handle Philip Seymour Hoffman’s sudden death, here’s your answer.
* Nabokov’s immigration card. (Nationality: “without.”)
* If You Thought You Couldn’t Go To Jail For Debt Anymore, You’re Wrong.
* And standardized testing? Just opt out.
* Justice Department to give married same-sex couples equal protection.
* Good news: FX will make Redshirts a limited series.
* And can The LEGO Movie really be that good? MetaFilter is on the scene.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 10, 2014 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, adjuncts, ADL, AIPAC, aliens, Amazon, America, Ani DiFranco, animals, AOL, archives, austerity, Barack Obama, basketball, Blue Marble, boxing, brainwashing, CEOs, cheerleading, Chicago, child abuse, class struggle, climate change, college rankings, Copenhagen, cultural preservation, David Brooks, David Graeber, debt, debtors prison, dementia, Department of Justice, Detroit, digital humanities, digitally, disability, Duke, Dylan Farrow, ecology, eldercare, equal protection, Fermi paradox, Fight Club, film, First Amendment, Flappy Bird, football, foreclosure, games, gay rights, George Zimmerman, giraffes, guaranteed basic income, guns, Haiti, health care, How the University Works, Hunger Games, ideology at its purest, immaterial labor, immigration, Israel, Julia Gaffield, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, labor, LEGO, marriage equality, Middle-Earth, Mockingjay, Nabokov, NASA, NCAA, neoliberalism, New York, New York City, NFL, Occupy, Olympics, outer space, Palestine, pedagogy, Philip Seymour Hoffman, police brutality, police violence, politics, prison-industrial complex, prisons, race, rape, rape culture, Redshirts, Russia, science fiction, slavery, sports, standardized testing, Star Trek, superfans, television, the weather, Truman Show Delusion, unions, Vikings, Walter Benjamin, war on drugs, war on education, Werner Herzog, Woody Allen, zombie houses, zoo
All the Links of the Week in One Convenient Location
* Ending the World the Human Way: Why can no one talk about climate change?
* You’ve seen it linked everywhere, but not here! Woody Allen’s Good Name. Don’t Listen to Woody Allen’s Biggest Defender. The Internet Digs Up Woody Allen’s Creepy Child-Loving Past. Woody Allen, My Pen Pal.
* The Boston Globe: The Invisible Professor. Part-Time Professors Demand Higher Pay; Will Colleges Listen? 111 Colleges Are Accused of Violating Law by Requiring Student-Aid Forms.
* Another university makes the queen sacrifice.
* Privilege and the Ph.D. The Tenure Code. 1,600 letters of recommendation.
* Fifty-Five Bodies, and Zero Trials, at the Florida School for Boys.
* Even the liberal Kevin Drum thinks former senator, former secretary of state Hillary Clinton has no accomplishments to run of president on, unlike (say) Obama when he ran for president, or George W. Bush, or Bill Clinton, or Mitt Romney, or….
* “The entire system is a joke. There is absolutely no living, breathing person with any kind of intellect who believes that a grand jury could consider and vote on 10 complex issues in the period of time that they use to deliberate on hundreds,” Joe Cheshire, a Raleigh attorney who handles criminal cases across North Carolina, told The Charlotte Observer.
* And all perfectly legal: Missouri Executes Man While His Appeal Was Still Pending Before Supreme Court.
* Who Killed the Jeff Davis 8?
* Broken clock watch: Antonin Scalia is… making sense?
* Wisconsin Teacher Fired for… Receiving Emails from His Sister.
* Cook, an Edinburg marksman, was target shooting toward the school from about a mile away when he struck the boys Dec. 12, 2011. The gunshots left Nicholas “Nicko” Tijerina, then 13, paralyzed and Edson Amaro, then 14, with serious internal organ damage.
* From the archives: In praise of Joanne Rowling’s Hermione Granger series. Harry Potter novels renamed.
* I think I’ve done this one before, too, but what the hell: Lynda Barry’s Course Syllabus.
* If It Happened There: The Super Bowl.
* Unloved Films, Part III: “The Hudsucker Proxy.”
* Daily Life in the Slave Quarters.
* A Local Teen’s Documentary on Slavery Premieres Friday in Detroit.
* How the Myth of the ‘Negro Cocaine Fiend’ Helped Shape American Drug Policy.
* Faculty set strike date at UIC.
* Closing SodaStream’s West Bank Factories Would Hurt Palestinians, but That’s Not the Point.
* ACLU lawsuit challenges Wisconsin same-sex marriage ban. Lawsuit claims Apple infringing on University of Wisconsin patent. Water Levels of the Great Lakes Are Declining.
* CVS Will Stop Selling Tobacco Products by October. I can’t believe it’s taken this long; it’s shocked me that pharmacies sold cigarettes ever since I worked in one way back in high school.
* Rest in peace, Philip Seymour Hoffman.
* Brooklyn chess star battles the pressure of expectations.
* A Mystery Illness Is Causing Starfish to Rip Themselves Into Pieces.
* Gasp! Marx Was Right!
* Gasp! Tar Sands Oil Development Is More Toxic Than Previously Thought, Study Finds.
* Gasp! Administrator Hiring Drove 28% Boom in Higher-Ed Work Force, Report Says.
* 12 Post-Potter Revelations J.K. Rowling Has Shared.
* California Considers Raising Its Minimum Wage To The Highest In The Country.
* What They’re Saying About The Grand Budapest Hotel.
* Now hanging on the wall of my office: The Life of Thought.
* It’s very important to McDonald’s that you know McNuggets are acceptably gross.
* Science Fiction as a Childhood Coping Mechanism.
* And the future truly is weird: Woman Gives Birth To Children, Discovers Her Twin Is Actually The Biological Mother, But She Is Technically Her Own Twin.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 5, 2014 at 7:30 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, ACLU, actors, actually existing media bias, adjuncts, administrative blight, Apple, art, beach art, Bill Cosby, billiards, books, broken clocks, California, Canada, cars, child molestation, chimeras, cigarettes, class struggle, Cleveland, climate change, CNN, comics, CVs, death penalty Missouri, Detroit, disease, drug war, Dylan Farrow, ecology, fast food, feminism, film, food, gay rights, genetics, genomics, Great Lakes, guns, Harry Potter, Hermione Granger, Hillary Clinton, How the University Works, Hudsucker Proxy, Israel, J.K. Rowling, Japanese internment, labor, letters of recommendation, Lynda Barry, marriage equality, Marx, McDonald's, McNuggets, minimum wage, models, murder, neoliberalism, North Carolina, obituary, over-educated literary theory PhDs, Palestine, parents, pharmacies, Philip Seymour Hoffman, police, police brutality, police violence, politics, pollution, pool, race, rape, rape culture, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, Scalia, schools, science, science fiction, sex workers, slavery, smoking, soda, SodaStream, starfish, strikes, student loans, Super Bowl, Supreme Court, syllabi, tar sands, tenure, the circle of life, the courts, the future is weird, The Grand Budapest Hotel, the law, the life of thought, true crime, Twitter, unions, Upworthy, war on education, water, Wes Anderson, Wisconsin, Woody Allen, you know for kids
All Is Quiet on New Year’s Day
All is quiet on New Year’s Day.
* As the Bush administration blessedly draws to a close, it’s important to remember the casualties of the War of Terror, people like Alberto Gonzales. (via)
* More people get their news from the Internet than from newspapers. More importantly:
The percentage of people younger than 30 citing television as a main news source has declined from 68% in September 2007 to 59% currently.
That’s good, good news.
* Howard Dean, Vermonter of the Year. Maybe next year, Ben and Jerry.
* Batman casting rumors you can believe in: Philip Seymour Hoffman as the Penguin.
* It’s the future, and Microsoft still sucks.
* Top 10 space stories of 2008. A different 10.
* Top 10 cryptozoology stories of 2008.
* James Howard Kunstler’s predictions for 2009. Prediction: Pain. Via MetaFilter.
* Thank god for philosophy grad students, the only graduate demographic upon Lit students can look down.
Written by gerrycanavan
December 31, 2008 at 8:00 pm
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged with 2008, 2009, academia, academic jobs, Alberto Gonzales, America, Batman, Ben and Jerry, blogs, Bush, cryptozoology, graduate student life, Howard Dean, James Howard Kunstler, mass media, Microsoft, NASA, newspapers, outer space, Philip Seymour Hoffman, philosophy, the Penguin, Vermont, war on terror, welcome to my future