Posts Tagged ‘Planetary’
I Have a Cold and I Must Blog
* Forgot to mention yesterday that Chrome for Mac is out, and it’s crazy fast.
* Time one-ups the Onion by including both Planetary *and* The Walking Dead on its best-comics-of-the-2000s list. But the price is losing Chris Ware, Marjane Satrapi, and, as Bleeding Cool notes, any sense of variety at all.
* R.W. Johnson writes from South Africa to report on the World Cup for LRB.
As one observes this huge event being put together one realises that soccer has become a matter of trying to defy gravity. Everything about the event – the expenditure on the stadiums, the players’ enormous wages, the vast sums for the TV rights, the glitz and glamour of all the WAGs and celebrities, and even the reasoning behind closing key city roads for Fifa or Blatter – indicates that extraordinary concentrations of wealth and power are involved. Everything we know about human behaviour when it is subjected to such powerful pressures and incentives leads us to expect that cheating and violence will become virtually inevitable. Not just handballs and diving, but crooked referees, crooked draws and all the rest. Yet we also know that it’s vital that the TV commentators are able to enthuse about ‘the beautiful game’ with at least a margin of credibility: think how disastrous it was for cricket when match-fixing was exposed, or how badly the Tour de France has suffered from all its doping scandals. In most countries in Africa and Latin America such pressures have led to the ruin of local leagues, while the match-fixing scandal currently being investigated in Germany suggests that the results of hundreds of matches in Central and Eastern Europe were also fraudulent. The number of countries in the world where a game of soccer is still a fair contest may be quite small.
* Marc Ambinder heroically risks his own sanity to annotate Sarah Palin’s climate change op-ed. Media Matters goes there, too.
* Related: It’s Always Snowing on the Drudge Report. P.S.: Watch out for Stalinists under the bed.
* Sotomayor’s first Supreme Court opinions are making news in part for her refusal of the term “illegal immigrant.”
* And Candeblog has the clip from David Cross’s pitched BBC show The Increasingly Poor Decisions of Todd Margaret that he played at the end of his show in Raleigh this fall.
Thursday Thursday
* The First Rule of J-School Is You Don’t Talk About J-School Debt.
* Nowhere in Manhattan. Hard to believe it is Manhattan. Via MeFi.
* Nnedi Okorafor has a nice guest post at Nebula on Africa and science fiction.
* The CEO of Whole Foods doesn’t want us to have health care. OpenLeft doesn’t want us to shop at Whole Foods anymore. Everyone at MetaFilter is mad at everyone.
* Top 10 Superhero Comics 2000-2009. I’ve read more of these than I would have expected, and can plug a bunch: All-Star Superman, Monster Society of Evil, New Frontier, Omega the Unknown, and Planetary are all worth reading in their own ways, as are some of the sillier Big Two offerings (I’ll admit to being fond of Booster Gold). Y: The Last Man is good, too, but of course it doesn’t really count. Via NeilAlien.
* Language and time. I found this interesting.
David Hauser and colleagues first showed that people with an angrier temperament are more likely to think of themselves as moving through time, than to think of time as moving towards them. You can test this on yourself by considering which day of the week a meeting has changed to, if it was originally planned for Wednesday but has been moved forward two days. If you think it’s now changed to Friday, then you’re someone who thinks of themselves as moving through time, whilst if you think the meeting is now on Monday, then you’re more passive, and you think about time passing you by.
I’m a Monday person for sure. I see can see why Ezra thinks it would be Friday, but it seems very unnatural to me to spatialize the week that way.
* And you can now tweet @Gliese581d.