If only

Categories: Technology

Random technology comment: Dave Winer asks, “And consider what heat would be generated if what Google is doing to us were done to Google. Can I put up a Web app that scrapes Google and replaces their ads with mine, or adds mine to theirs?” Dave answers himself, “When you search Scripting News with the Weblog Search page, it sends your search request to Google, and gets back the top 50 matches.”

February 28, 2005 · 1 min · Bryant

X-Ray vision

Categories: Culture

For reference: Oscar predictions from CNN, the Guardian, Associated Press, and the talented Robin Laws. Without summarizing all of them, suffice it to say that my picks were not deeply daring. Then again, neither is the Academy.

February 27, 2005 · 1 min · Bryant

Drifting

Categories: Personal

More gratuitous photos of my vacation follow. Follow links for bigger versions, etc. Warning: warm blue water ahead.

February 27, 2005 · 3 min · Bryant

Can you hear the paper rip?

Categories: Culture

It’s about that time. I’ll probably live-blog the Oscars tonight, just because I like doing it. My commentary on the nominees is here. My picks for winners (and preferred winners if I had to pick from the nominees): Best Actor: Jamie Foxx. Should be Clint Eastwood, but the Academy will steer clear of him this year. The political aspects to Million Dollar Baby didn’t help him. Best Actress: hard to call, but I think Hilary Swank. (My other guess would be Catalina Moreno.) Kate Winslet should win it, though. ...

February 27, 2005 · 2 min · Bryant

Song and dance and sorrow

Categories: Reviews

In 1981, Steve Martin took on his second starring role in a motion picture in Pennies From Heaven. It was not exactly what was expected from the guy who’d just starred in The Jerk. People went in looking for broad slapstick, and found themselves in the middle of a deeply cynical musical. Instead of using the musical numbers as uplifting emotional high points, Pennies From Heaven recasts the musical number as an unhealthy fantasy. This goes beyond the musical work of Sondheim, who broadened the emotions depicted by the musicial number to include angst and despair, and subverts the entire concept of the musical. Pennies From Heaven uses the musical form to critique the musical form. It is unclear to me how this ever got greenlit; I suspect MGM was just caught up by the idea of reviving the musical. ...

February 25, 2005 · 3 min · Bryant

Turning back into the light

Categories: Culture

FYI: Theodore Roszak’s Flicker is back in print. It’s a great book about movies, albeit one with a somewhat unsatisfying ending; this review hits the mark for me. Particularly in the snark about Aronofsky as a director. (Via Twitch.)

February 24, 2005 · 1 min · Bryant

Bang phut

Categories: Culture

I’m living my life wrong. How do I know this? I never get to say things like “The optimal, best-case scenario is the ashes will be shot out of a cannon.” (original) Ever.

February 23, 2005 · 1 min · Bryant

Cutting edge

Categories: Culture

In her first scene in Constantine, Tilda Swinton wears a bespoke suit. A bespoke suit is the best possible suit: hand-sewn and carefully tailored to the individual. English Cut is a bespoke blog: a blog written by a Savile Row bespoke tailor, who has made suits for Bryan Ferry, Prince Charles, and Ralph Lauren. Not a shabby resume.

February 23, 2005 · 1 min · Bryant

Neck and neck

Categories: Technology

Although Ulysses has flaws, CopyWrite has a very similar interface and provides a slightly better editing pane (paragraph spacing) plus in-line formatting. It looks like I can coerce InDesign into handling formatting codes for me, which means named styles are less important. And CopyWrite is about a quarter the price of Ulysses. I’m doing my latest game (The Kiss of God) in CopyWrite; after I’m done I’ll post about the experience.

February 22, 2005 · 1 min · Bryant

Read the record

Categories: Politics

Final tally: around 58% of eligible Iraqi voters voted. My definition of success was 60%, so that’s a near miss. It’s close enough so that I don’t feel comfortable saying Bush missed that metric, but I wouldn’t say he succeeded either. The ruling coalition needs 184 votes to reach a 2/3rds majority. The United Iraqi Alliance can reach that easily with the Kurdish parties, and fall just short if it teams up with Allawi’s Iraqi List. That means, in practice, that the UIA can form a weak ruling coalition with Allawi and a strong one with the Kurds. The price of doing business with the Kurds is a mostly independent Kurdish north, possibly including Kirkuk. ...

February 20, 2005 · 2 min · Bryant