In setting up my new Mac, I had to remember an improvement I haven’t thought about since 2011 (the last time I set up a new Mac): change Command-V, ⌘-V, to “Paste and Match Style.” The change greatly simplifies to work of copying and pasting.
And here’s how to type ⌘, ⌥, and other symbols available from Emoji & Symbols. It’s telling, I think, that Apple makes silly emoji front and center but hides the basic stuff of the Mac keyboard from view.
[Is it ⌘V or ⌘-V? Mojave menus say ⌘V. But Apple’s December 2018 page about keyboard shortcuts uses hyphens.]
Tuesday, January 22, 2019
⌘-V
By Michael Leddy at 9:45 AM comments: 4
Giuliani interviewed
This New Yorker interview with Rudy Giuliani is worth reading.
This bit leaves me speechless. Giuliani is speaking about Martin Luther King Jr.:
“Oh, my goodness, yes, he was a great hero of mine. I believe he taught me, like he did all of us, how bad segregation was. Those of us in the North wouldn’t have known that without him.”A related post
Fools (Giuliani, not a Shakespearean one)
By Michael Leddy at 9:28 AM comments: 0
Monday, January 21, 2019
Two minutes
Donald President Trump spent two minutes at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial in Washington today. From The New York Times:
Mr. Trump’s stop by the memorial — to observe a moment of silence without extended public remarks — appeared to be a last-minute addition to his calendar. The president’s schedule listed no public events to mark the federal holiday honoring King’s life, which had drawn criticism from civil rights activists.You can follow Trump’s public schedule at Factbase.
By Michael Leddy at 3:32 PM comments: 4
MLK
Colbert I. King (no relation), writing in The Washington Post:
The greatest contrast between the time King led the struggle for America’s legal and social transformation and now is a White House occupied by Donald Trump.
The federal government, once a powerful legal and moral force to make real the promise of democracy, is in the hands of adversaries who seek to restore a hierarchy in which the interests of the bigoted, the xenophobic, the sexist and the defender of white male privilege always come out on top. . . .
How far have we traveled?
From the promise of guaranteed rights to a return to the insecurity of injustice. A pluralistic America is being cynically drawn along racial lines by a president who is as far from the civility of his predecessors Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Ford, Carter, Reagan, the Bushes, Clinton and Obama as the charter of the Confederacy was from the Constitution.
King, and the movement he led, would be outraged. The rest of us should be, too.
By Michael Leddy at 7:56 AM comments: 2
Sunday, January 20, 2019
Fools
I watched a bit of Rudy Giuliani’s performance on CNN this morning and thought again of how much he reminds me of a Shakespearean fool. The Shakespearean fool serves a king. Giuliani serves a would-be king. The Shakespearean fool speaks whatever comes into his head. Giuliani — yes, the same.
The great difference: the Shakespearean fool speaks truth to power. He speaks wisdom in the form of deeply sensical nonsense. Giuliani speaks mere nonsense, a fast-paced double-talk whose purpose is to befuddle. He’s really no Shakespearean fool at all, though he does play a fool on TV.
By Michael Leddy at 1:01 PM comments: 5
Domestic comedy
“I only know Ben Mankiewicz. Everyone else is Not Ben Mankiewicz.”
See also Buz and Not Buz.
Related reading
All OCA domestic comedy posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:54 AM comments: 2
Today’s Nancy
Olivia Jaimes’s Nancy is a special treat today: familiar props (cookie jar, means to it) and lots of meta.
Related reading
All OCA Nancy posts (Pinboard)
[Lots of meta: I read the differing page layouts as the difference between life and art.]
By Michael Leddy at 8:49 AM comments: 4
Saturday, January 19, 2019
Today’s Saturday Stumper
Today’s Newsday Saturday Stumper, by Matthew Sewell, is mostly easy. For instance, 41-Across, ten letters, “First Maria in The Sound of Music.” Or 50-Across, nine letters, “Olympian dubbed ‘Lightning.’” But the northeast corner is tough. I filled in my final answer, 9-Across, five letters, “What fills some shoes,” knew it had to be right, but had no idea what it meant until I looked it up.
Four clues I especially liked, all of which made short answers more fun: 19-Across, four letters, “What surrounders.” 43-Across, three letters, “Ironclad designation.” 3-Down, three letters, “Ox tail.” And 29-Down, three letters, “When live NHL, NFL, MLB and NBA games might be watched.”
No open refrigerators (spoilers): the answers are in the comments.
By Michael Leddy at 8:40 AM comments: 7
Friday, January 18, 2019
Larkin anachronism
[The Bookshop (dir. Isabel Coixet, 2017). Click for more readable books.]
The Bookshop might be said to take place in 1950-something. This still is from early in the film. A man dictating a letter later on says “1959.” Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451: 1953. Kingsley Amis’s That Uncertain Feeling: 1955. But Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita and Bradbury’s Dandelion Wine, both of which appear later in the film, as new books, the one shortly before the letter (complete with a reference to Graham Greene’s review), the other not long after the letter: 1955 and 1957.
The covers for the Bradbury and Amis in this shot look right — I can’t say about the spines. But a Philip Larkin Collected Poems didn’t appear until until 1988, followed by a second Collected (2003) and a Complete Poems (2012).
There are many ways to find fault with The Bookshop — the Larkin anachronism is just a small one.
By Michael Leddy at 9:11 AM comments: 4
Pasta, sardines, and fennel
[“I’m thinkin’ ’bout a-this whole world.”]
The Crow, a sardine fan like me, sent me links for cooking videos focused on “the small oily fish.” Last night I tried this recipe, an impression of the Sicilian dish pasta con le sarde. Winner, winner, sardine dinner! Many flavors, many textures, all of them delightful. The only changes I would make: add some salt and pepper, and use two cans of sardines. One is not enough.
The video shows this dish coming together in about two minutes. It took me about an hour — a fair amount of assembly is required. A more organized cook would need less time. And would not forget the sardines until the last minute.
Thanks, Martha!
Related reading
All OCA sardine posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:24 AM comments: 4