A one-hour broadcast, from the series Radio Lab. Includes a segment with Jonah Lehrer, author of the forthcoming Proust Was a Neuroscientist.
Listen online:
Memory and Forgetting (Radio Lab, WNYC Radio)
“A parrot can say ‘I will meet you
downtown at 8:00’ — but
he won’t be there”
A one-hour broadcast, from the series Radio Lab. Includes a segment with Jonah Lehrer, author of the forthcoming Proust Was a Neuroscientist.
Listen online:
Memory and Forgetting (Radio Lab, WNYC Radio)
By Michael Leddy at 9:27 PM comments: 0
I discovered these balloons in the backyard this morning. Was someone trying to brighten our empty nest? No.
I discovered these balloons in the backyard this morning. Was someone trying to brighten our empty nest? No.
The card attached was addressed to the "Bus Garage Office": "Thanks for another smooth start." As I learned when I called the flowershop, these balloons were delivered yesterday.
The schoolbus company has its office on the outskirts of town. These balloons must have traveled about four miles to show up in our backyard.
By Michael Leddy at 12:36 PM comments: 0
Elaine has posted a photograph.
I remembered yesterday an exchange that took place nineteen summers ago. I was at a gathering for participants in an NEH seminar and their families. As my daughter Rachel, then one-and-a-half, toddled around, a fellow seminar member said to me, "They're such a nuisance, aren't they?"
No, they aren't.
By Michael Leddy at 7:28 PM comments: 0
[That's how the local newspaper might put it.]
The so-called lemonade that I wrote about about last week has continued to occupy my thought process. So I e-mailed Supervalu to ask (politely) how the words "old-fashioned recipe" apply to the product in question, a blend of water, chemicals, and dye. Days went by without a reply, so I tried again and was told that my comments had been forwarded to the manufacturer and that I could expect a reply soon. In today's mail, a polite non-answer ("Your comments are being forwarded to Our Own Brands Product Developers for their consideration"), along with $4 in coupons.
These coupons may be applied to products from an extended family of store brands: Flavorite, Foodland, Shoppers Value, Super Chill, Yotastic (there's a snappy name for yogurt), and many more. Super Chill Cola, a decent cola in three-liter bottles, and a sentimental family favorite, seems to promise the most bang for the buck. (Or four bucks.)
Related post
Lemonade and lies
By Michael Leddy at 6:59 PM comments: 0
"The staff at Owens Funeral Home invites you to join them . . ."
Yipes!
". . . in supporting public radio."
Whew.
By Michael Leddy at 6:55 PM comments: 0
My son Ben asked for a family game of Cranium before heading off to college. The picture to the left comes from that game, from a Sensosketch challenge, requiring the player to draw with eyes closed.
Ben drew, no peeking allowed. His sister Rachel had the answer at once. Ben embellished the picture a bit in the post-game hubbub.
The score of the game: Kids: 1, Parents: 0. (Humph.)
What answer was Ben's picture meant to elicit?
Fifty — no, make that one-hundred bonus points and a free extra turn for the first commenter to get it.
The hint accompanying this Cranium challenge: band.
By Michael Leddy at 7:49 PM comments: 8
Max Roach, a founder of modern jazz who rewrote the rules of drumming in the 1940's and spent the rest of his career breaking musical barriers and defying listeners' expectations, died early today in Manhattan. He was 83. . . .If you've never heard Max Roach, try Money Jungle, with Duke Ellington and Charles Mingus.
Over the years he challenged both his audiences and himself by working not just with standard jazz instrumentation, and not just in traditional jazz venues, but in a wide variety of contexts, some of them well beyond the confines of jazz as that word is generally understood. . . .
Mr. Roach explained his philosophy to The New York Times in 1990: "You can't write the same book twice. Though I've been in historic musical situations, I can't go back and do that again. And though I run into artistic crises, they keep my life interesting."
Max Roach, a Founder of Modern Jazz, Dies at 83 (New York Times)
By Michael Leddy at 7:39 PM comments: 0
Mme Verdurn is no everyday salonnière:
Mme Verdurin did not give "dinners," but she had "Wednesdays." Her Wednesdays were a work of art. While knowing that there was nothing to equal them elsewhere, Mme Verdurin introduced fine distinctions between them. "This last Wednesday wasn't up to the one before," she would say. "But I think the next'll be one the most successful I've ever given." She sometimes went so far as to confess: "This Wednesday wasn't worthy of the others. In return, I've got a big surprise for you for the one after that." In the final weeks of the season in Paris, before leaving for the country, the Patronne would announce that the Wednesdays were ending. It was an opportunity to spur on the faithful: "There are only three Wednesdays left, there are only two more," she would say, in the same tone of voice as if the world were about to end. "You're not going to let me down next Wednesday for the closure." But this closure was a sham, for she would warn them: "Now, officially, there are no more Wednesdays. That was the last for this year. But I shall be here all the same on Wednesdays. We'll have Wednesday among ourselves. Who knows? These little intimate Wednesdays will perhaps be the pleasantest. At La Raspalière, the Wednesdays were necessarily restricted, and since, according as some friend had been met with when passing through and had been invited for one evening or another, almost every day was a Wednesday.
Marcel Proust, Sodom and Gomorrah, translated by John Sturrock (New York: Penguin, 2002), 251
All Proust posts (via Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 7:59 AM comments: 0
"Rizzuto's cultural status was further elevated in 1993 when editors Tom Peyer and Hart Seely published O Holy Cow!: The Selected Verse of Phil Rizzuto, a collection of Rizzuto's on-air monologues and ramblings, transcribed and reformatted as found poetry. Rizzuto donated his royalties from the book to a variety of children's charities." (Wikipedia)
Apodosis
Fly ball right field
It's gonna drop in.
No it's not gonna drop in.
Happy 46th wedding anniversary
Thomas and Mary Anne Clearwater.
That's it.
The last three, six, nine, twelve Yankees
Went down in order.
So that's it.
The game is over.
[June 4, 1991
Toronto at New York
Tom Henke pitching to Pat Kelly
Ninth inning, two outs, bases empty
Blue Jays win 5-3]
From O Holy Cow!: The Selected Verse of Phil Rizzuto (NY: Ecco, 1993)
Phil Rizzuto, Yankees Shortstop, Dies at 89 (New York Times
Phil Rizzuto (Wikipedia)
Apodosis (Wikipedia)
By Michael Leddy at 10:37 PM comments: 2
Spotted last week in a New Jersey supermarket:
Oikos (οίκος) is one of my favorite ancient Greek words. Its meanings include house, dwelling, household, and family (as in "the house of Atreus"). Oikos is the source of ec- and eco-, as in ecology and economics. It's a key word in Homer's Odyssey, which is about finding one's way back home.
[Photograph by Rachel Leddy.]
Earthrise (NASA)(Thanks, Rachel!)
All Homer posts (via Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:47 PM comments: 2