By my son, in a computer lab:
"Our PowerPoint says a lot more than the other PowerPoints."(Thanks, Ben!)
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“Who are we as a country?”
By my son, in a computer lab:
"Our PowerPoint says a lot more than the other PowerPoints."(Thanks, Ben!)
Related posts
The Cognitive Style of PowerPoint
PowerPoint and the war
All "Overheard" posts (via Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 10:16 AM comments: 0
Yes, Louis Armstrong and Johnny Cash! They're performing "Blue Yodel No. 9," which Armstrong recorded with The Singing Brakeman, Jimmie Rodgers, and pianist Lil Hardin Armstrong, on July 16, 1930, in Los Angeles.
This recreation is from The Johnny Cash Show, first broadcast on October 28, 1970. According to Michael Minn's Louis Armstrong Discography, Armstrong's appearance on this show marked his return to the trumpet after a two-year health-related hiatus. Listen for the gently bouncing trumpet phrases from 4:43 to 4:47: that's the sound of a genius at work.
Blue Yodel No. 9 (YouTube)
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By Michael Leddy at 11:55 AM comments: 0
Perhaps I like Louis Armstrong because he's made poetry out of being invisible. I think it must be because he's unaware that he is invisible.For many people, Louis Armstrong (1901-1971) was and is nothing more than a genial entertainer: a smile, a handkerchief, and, from 1967 on, the singer of the sentimental anthem "What a Wonderful World." Armstrong's genius as an improviser, his technical ability as an instrumentalist, his wholly original singing (he's the most influential singer in American popular music), his capacity for reimagining popular songs (his 1931 "Stardust" might be the greatest example): all these elements of his musical and cultural accomplishment remain largely invisible. I credit Armstrong with much greater self-knowledge than Ellison's philosophizing narrator will begrudge, but there's no gainsaying his characterization of Louis Armstrong as an invisible man.
Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man (1952)
By 1935, Louis Armstrong had been making records for thirteen years. Between 1926 and 1928, he had led the small-group performances known as the Hot Fives and Hot Sevens, regarded as among the greatest jazz recordings. (Try "Weather Bird" or "West End Blues.") Performing in the pit band for Hot Chocolates in 1929 in New York, Armstrong had stolen the show night after night with a performance of "Ain't Misbehavin'." In 1932 and 1933 he had toured Britain, Denmark, Norway, and Holland. The Danes had the intelligence to film him performing "Dinah," "I Cover the Waterfront," and "Tiger Rag," performances that remain dazzling in their elegance and intensity. The Times had taken note of none of it.
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"I Cover the Waterfront," "Dinah," "Tiger Rag"
By Michael Leddy at 7:05 AM comments: 12
From the world of "colledge," a partial conversation between two friends:
". . . got drunk."
"Open bar! How can you beat that?"
"Exactly!" [Laughs and thrusts clenched right hand in air.]
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By Michael Leddy at 4:12 PM comments: 0
From "The Autumn of the Multitaskers," an essay by novelist Walter Kirn in the November 2007 Atlantic:
"Where do you want to go today?" Microsoft asked us.(Thanks to L. Lee Lowe, who pointed her readers to this essay.)
Now that I no longer confuse freedom with speed, convenience, and mobility, my answer would be: "Away. Just away. Someplace where I can think."
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By Michael Leddy at 10:06 AM comments: 3
I have greater and greater misgivings about the e-mails that Barack Obama's campaign is sending to supporters. The problems that I see in these messages suggest the difficulty of using a relatively new means of communication effectively. From October 18, a case in point:
Michael,Am I expected to believe that as Barack Obama is leaving a television studio, he has stopped to fire up a laptop and e-mail me? At 3:35 AM? Yes, this message was sent at 3:35 AM, when I suspect everyone involved in the taping had long since left the studio, Senator Obama included.
I'm leaving the Tonight Show studio and I wanted to share something.
Michael --Worse still, the Obama campaign continues to use "Hey" as a greeting. If anyone from Obama '08 is reading: "Hey" is a terrible way to address someone in an e-mail. "Hey" is what college students are told not to write when they e-mail their professors. What makes campaign strategists imagine that voters and potential contributors want to be addressed in this way?
Last night each of the presidential campaigns reported their third-quarter fundraising numbers.
I need you to make a donation to close the gap:Not even a "Thanks"?
https://donate.barackobama.com/closethegap
Barack
Obama is relying on you and me to make this happen. If I can give again, you can give too. Help Obama close the gap with Hillary so we can change politics:See what's happened? Mr. Primous, it would appear, is replying to the e-mail that I quoted at the beginning of this post. But that message addressed the recipient by name. Here it begins with "Hey." Mr. Primous' message is, of course, not a reply (in the e-mail sense) at all; it's an e-mail that quotes and makes generic some of the text of the previous Obama e-mail, with "Hey" replacing the previously personalized greeting.
https://donate.barackobama.com/closethegap
Thank you,
Earnest
Retired from Postal Service
----------Original message----------
From: Barack Obama
Subject: Hillary's money
Hey --
Last night each of the presidential campaigns reported their third-quarter fundraising numbers.
1. Use a consistent, recognizable sender name. "Obama '08" would be a good one.The person I spoke with asked whether I realized that Earnest Primous is a real person (of course I did) and explained that the campaign was trying something new. But novelty in e-mailing is not a good strategy, not if one wants the recipient to open, read, and act. And the false informality of these e-mails is sadly at odds with the honest eloquence that draws people to the Obama campaign.
2. Use a consistent, non-cryptic subject line. "A message from Obama '08" would be a good one.
3. Use a serious tone, neither falsely informal nor brusque.
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By Michael Leddy at 5:49 PM comments: 0
FreeRice is a novel humanitarian project: for every correct definition one chooses, a participating company donates ten grains of rice to the United Nations World Food Program.
(Thanks, Ben!)
By Michael Leddy at 6:55 AM comments: 0
Philip Kolb (1907-1992), professor of French at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, edited the 21-volume edition of Proust's correspondence. He was working on the final volume when he died. Kolb's answer to the question of how he could have spent his lifetime "working on a single man":
[T]he answer to the question is that, when the subject of one's inquiry is Proust, a lifetime would scarcely suffice to permit exploration in depth of the innumerable facets of his universe. Nothing could be more captivating than to explore the mind of such a genius — an intellect of such capacity, an artist of such prodigious sweep and power, whose ability to move us, to make us feel the beauties of nature, and the warmth of human affection was so great — or to observe how he reacted when confronted with current events, how he judged his contemporaries, how his own ideas evolved with the passage of time, or simply to observe what inspired him, how he created his characters and episodes. In editing the correspondence of such a man, one should, of course, bear in mind that so modest an endeavor cannot constitute one's sole aim, but rather it should be a means of attaining a deeper comprehension of the work of the creative artist. In Proust's case, his correspondence represents a special kind of work, since he never intended its publication. For the reader, it offers a means of gaining a better understanding of his mind, his character, and, consequently, his great work. And to the editor, delving into his writings has meant an unending enchantment, an enrichment, and a widening of horizons.
Philip Kolb, "The Making of a Proust Scholar," The American Scholar 53 (1984): 512-13
All Proust posts (via Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 1:37 PM comments: 0
"In other news tonight, scandal at a major American university. . . ."Katie Couric, doing her bit for academic inflation, as she segued to the scandal at Oral Roberts University.
Scandal Vulnerability Assessment (via CBS News)
By Michael Leddy at 6:17 PM comments: 0
"Wilhelm!"One scream on screen, from 1953 to 1999. The compilation is hilariously good.
"Yeah, I'll just fill my pipe." [Over-the-top scream follows.]
Wilhelm: The Man and His Scream, compiled by Pablo Hidalgo (YouTube)(Thanks, Ben!)
Does That Scream Sound Familiar? (ABC News)
By Michael Leddy at 12:45 PM comments: 0