From The New York Times, a report on the mermaids of Weeki Wachee Springs. Elaine and I saw bit of their show not long ago in the very strange Route 66 episode “The Cruelest Sea of All” (aired April 5, 1963). Very little seems to have changed in fifty years.
Saturday, July 6, 2013
“Poindexter barbat”
[Zippy, July 6, 2013.]
“Poindexter barbat”? The linguist Arnold Zwicky has a plausible explanation.
Related reading
All Zippy posts (Pinboard)
[Does anyone else remember this guy?]
By Michael Leddy at 11:42 AM comments: 0
An otter failure
[Mark Trail, July 6, 2013.]
“Them”: a couple of otters. Rusty spoke to “them” just yesterday. I quote:
“You two can play in the yard while I go inside and have lunch. But don't wander off — I’ll be back in a few minutes!”And yet, as Rusty is about to discover, they have wandered — “into the wilderness,” “back to their river home.”
I am troubled to think that the adopted son of the great outdoorsman Mark Trail thinks that otters will follow directions given in English. Everybody knows or else should know that one must speak to otters in Otterman.
Related reading
All Mark Trail posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 11:31 AM comments: 2
Friday, July 5, 2013
Movie recommendation: Stories We Tell
What happened?
Gilbert Sorrentino, Aberration of
Starlight
In my family, we’ve been fans of Sarah Polley since Ramona, the ten-episode CBC series that aired on PBS when our children were tykes. In the documentary Stories We Tell (2013), Polley seeks out a crucial truth of her family’s history, interviewing her father, her siblings, and family friends and relations, all of whom tell their stories — what they know, and what they don’t know. As you might suspect from the list of interviewees, the crucial truth concerns Polley’s mother Diane, an actress and casting director who died in 1990, when Polley was eleven.
Stories We Tell has been described as a matter of mystery and contradiction, but there’s really very little of Rashomon here: what happened becomes clear early on. The real strength of the film is its presentation of love and marriage and family life as the work of fallible people who make difficult choices and must learn to live with the consequences. Or to rewrite Tolstoy: All families are imperfect, but each is imperfect in its own way. A second strength is the film’s foregrounding of the work of storytelling. In one of my favorite scenes, Polley’s actor father reads in a recording studio his own written account of his marriage as Polley directs, asking him to reread here, slow down there. What becomes clearer as the film goes on is that Polley is telling a story, one that not only explores but also imagines and recreates the past.
Stories We Tell has some flaws. The film runs a little long, seeming to wrap up at about the ninety-minute mark before continuing for another eighteen minutes. Greater variety in the circumstances of interviewing would lend the film greater visual interest. (I’m thinking, of all things, of the variety of interview settings in Claude Lanzmann’s documentary Shoah: a barber shop, a café, an open field.) But these are minor complaints. Stories We Tell is unusual, inventive, and filled with humanity. Perhaps it will arrive at a theater near you.
You can read more about Stories We Tell at the film’s website. Careful: the trailer gives away more than you might want to know.
Thanks to Mike Brown for putting this film into my front brain.
[In Sorrentino’s novel, the repeated question What happened? is Marie Recco’s way of asking what went wrong in her marriage.]
By Michael Leddy at 9:00 AM comments: 0
Thursday, July 4, 2013
The Fourth of July
[“Fourth Of July Celebrations Wantagh, Li”. Photograph by Leonard McCombe. Wantagh, New York. No date. From the Life Photo Archive.]
If I were the photographer, the description would read: “Youngsters engage in frenzied bidding war for meat, meat by-products.”
Happy Fourth of July.
Related reading
Another Leonard McCombe photograph
[“Li” = Long Island.]
By Michael Leddy at 7:18 AM comments: 2
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
Joad’s Corollary
A corollary of Friedrich Nietzsche’s principle of eternal return:
Time is infinite. Imagination is not. Thus there are remakes.See also Stubbs’s Corollary.
[Inspired by the news that Steven Spielberg is planning to remake The Grapes of Wrath. Yes, there are good reasons to retell stories. But here I say hands off.]
By Michael Leddy at 4:44 PM comments: 1
Dale Irby, man of fashion
Newly retired teacher Dale Irby wore the same shirt and sweater-vest for forty years of school pictures. There’s proof online: a slideshow and a video montage (The Dallas Morning News).
Thanks, Rachel, for sharing this story.
By Michael Leddy at 9:13 AM comments: 2
Advice from Sydney Smith
At Letters of Note, the cleric Sydney Smith writes to a friend with advice for overcoming “low spirits.” It is poignant reading.
I should like to have known Sydney Smith and shared a cup of tea or coffee with him.
By Michael Leddy at 8:55 AM comments: 0
Marco Arment on RSS
Marco Arment on RSS and and the end of Google Reader:
RSS represents the antithesis of this new world: it’s completely open, decentralized, and owned by nobody, just like the web itself. . . .[RSS is what creates a website’s feed.]
That world formed the web’s foundations — without that world to build on, Google, Facebook, and Twitter couldn’t exist. But they’ve now grown so large that everything from that web-native world is now a threat to them, and they want to shut it down. “Sunset” it. “Clean it up.” “Retire” it. Get it out of the way so they can get even bigger and build even bigger proprietary barriers to anyone trying to claim their territory.
Well, fuck them, and fuck that.
By Michael Leddy at 8:45 AM comments: 0
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Go Read, a Google Reader alternative
I’m not sure where I read about this one, but I’m glad that I did: Go Read. Its creator Matt Jibson describes it as “fast, snappy, and clean.” I like that he uses a serial comma in that description. I like Go Read. It has no “features” to speak of — just a bright, minimal layout. (Much nicer than The Old Reader.) And from what I’ve seen, Go Read, unlike Feedly, places images where they belong.
Go Read isn’t perfect: it lacks search (“will take some time”); post chronology is sometimes off; and post titles (to my eye) are much too large. All of which is to say that it’s not Google Reader. How could it be? It’s one guy.
Jibson’s plans include “non-annoying ads,” removable with a small fee. I think that I’ll be paying that fee in the near future.
*
July 3: In iOS, Go Read shows only unread posts. And it misses posts that The Old Reader picks up. Sigh.
*
July 3: Yes, it’s a work in progress, whose developer is on the ball, on the case, responsive to user inquiries, and working to get things right. I have high hopes for Go Read.
Misadventures in feedworld
Feedly it ain’t
Feedly v. Feedly
[I’m done with Feedly.]
By Michael Leddy at 9:50 PM comments: 0