Wednesday, February 26, 2020

“Truck Proximity”


[“Truck Proximity.” xkcd, February 26, 2020.]

A related post
Kids and garbage trucks

Matthews and Warren


Elaine and I watched this exchange last night in disbelief, as Elizabeth Warren explained the ridiculously obvious to the dullest knife in the MSNBC drawer. Chris Matthews needs to take his eructations, figurative and literal, into a comfortable retirement.

I have never been a Matthews fan. And I still recall with pleasure this interview with Jon Stewart.

A Sonny Rollins interview

“This world is not what it’s cracked up to be”: Sonny Rollins, interviewed for The New York Times. The interview dwells mostly on matters of life and death, with many deeply Buddhist observations.

On an unrelated note, Rollins confesses that he never cottoned to the Rolling Stones, thinking them merely derivative of black music. He then tells this story:

“I do remember once I was in the supermarket up in Hudson, New York, and they were playing Top 40 records. I heard this song and thought, Who’s that guy? His playing struck a chord in me. Then I said, ‘Wait a minute, that’s me!’ It was my playing on one of those Rolling Stones records.”
Trivia: I noticed Rollins again invoking ice cream and sex as examples of fleeting, inconsequential pleasure.

Related reading
All OCA Sonny Rollins posts (Pinboard)

[Rollins played with the Stones on Tattoo You, most famously on the single “Waiting on a Friend.”]

Sluggo in the library


[Nancy, February 26, 2020.]

Bookstores too, Sluggo. See Jack Cella: “If you’re in a decent bookstore, you can look at any shelf and realize how little you know.”

Here’s all of today’s Nancy.

Related reading
All OCA Nancy posts (Pinboard)

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Bam!

Elizabeth Warren, a few minutes ago: “I don’t care how much money Mayor Bloomberg has. The core of the Democratic Party will never trust him.”

“Catch” of a Lifetime


[Life, October 10, 1956. Click for a larger view.]

Pencils were serious business (and sometimes, as in this full-page advertisement, punny business). How serious? There’s even a 1 1/2® “Servisoft” Mirado, “smoother and blacker than a 2, stronger and longer lasting than a 1.” A gimmick, sure, but only possible when the average user took pencils seriously.

Related reading
All OCA pencil posts (Pinboard) : Farewell, Mirado

Farewell, Mirado


[An Eagle Mikado and Webster’s Second. Click for a larger pencil.]

Stephen at pencil talk has learned that Newell Brands Office Products has discontinued the Mirado pencil. The Mirado began life in the early twentieth century as the Mikado, manufactured by the Eagle Pencil Company. As Henry Petroski’s The Pencil: A History of Design and Circumstance notes, Eagle changed the pencil’s name from Mikado to Mirado on December 8, 1941.

I’ve written with many a Mirado, and especially liked Mirado Woodtones, in natural colors with a clear glossy coat. Recent Papermate Mirados were pretty mediocre. I found the Eagle Mikado in the photograph some years ago, probably at a flea market. It was, and is, still unsharpened.

Here’s some background on the Mikado/Mirado.

Related reading
All OCA pencil posts (Pinboard) : “Catch” of s lifetime : Jean Arthur holds what looks like a Mikado : The New Yorker visits the Eagle Pencil Company : “This is the Anatomy of an Eagle”

Monday, February 24, 2020

Weses

A Google Alert for stefan zweig brought this amusing item to my attention today. Amusing, at least, to me. The SCK is The Society of the Crossed Keys, a secret organization of hotel concierges:

The SCK is an off-beat plot concoction by director Wes Craven for his colourful Oscar-winning film, The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014). In the movie Ralph Fiennes' meticulously slick concierge Monsieur Gustave of the titular hotel, calls on his secret society for help when he is falsely accused of the murder of a hotel guest. Black belt concierges from world renowned hotels swoop in to help save the day.
A screenshot in case the original disappears:



Related reading
All OCA Stefan Zweig posts (Pinboard)

“The 4d’s”

The Washington Post reports on Naomi Seibt, a conservative think tank’s answer to Greta Thunberg. The article quotes Graham Brookie of the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab, dedicating to exposing disinformation:

While the campaign “is not outright disinformation,” Brookie said in an email, it “does bear resemblance to a model we use called the 4d’s — dismiss the message, distort the facts, distract the audience, and express dismay at the whole thing.”

Brookie added: “The tactic is intended to create an equivalency in spokespeople and message. In this case, it is a false equivalency between a message based in climate science that went viral organically and a message based in climate skepticism trying to catch up using paid promotion.”
The 4d’s could be considered a playbook for the sitting president. But Donald Trump* has other tricks. Among them, the 4p’s: purges, pardons, the persecution of refugees, and the prosecution of political enemies.

“Visible branch establishments”

Dunstan (formerly Dunstable) Ramsay recalls the gravel pit in the village of Deptford:


Robertson Davies, Fifth Business (1970).

Also from this novel
“Fellows of the first importance”