“I got the new iPhone, and I can’t tell the difference really.”Less Onion-y: a quick diss of
“I got the new watch, I can’t tell the difference.”
“I got the new computer. I’ve been so busy I haven't had time to open it.”
Saturday, October 30, 2021
Not from The Onion
By Michael Leddy at 4:39 PM comments: 0
Today’s Saturday Stumper
Today’s Newsday Saturday crossword is by Stan Newman. It’s an easy puzzle by Stumper standards. I found my way with two toeholds, 23-D, three letters, “Informal ‘exceedingly’” and 29-A, three letters, “Petition.” And I was off.
Some clue-and-answer pairs I liked:
3-D, eight letters, “Ducks glide there.” Is it okay to call this clue cute?
9-A, five letters, “Breaks into a vault.” The kind of clue that doing crosswords teaches you to understand.
10-D, seven letters, “Canine coats.” See 9-A.
17-A, nine letters, “Pancake purveyors.” Feels very ‘80s to me. But I still like it.
30-D, nine letters, “Étude embellishment.” Three in a row. (Alliterative clues, that is.)
45-A, nine letters, “Heating system component.” Takes me back to earlier abodes.
52-A, nine letters, “Navigational hobbyist.” I didn’t know about this hobby.
53-A, five letters, “Earliest-born Poker Hall of Famer.” I’m out.
If you, too, are having difficulty with the Newsday paywall, you can access the Stumper at GameLab. And if Newsday is listening: please consider offering a crossword subscription. The Stumper has a national audience, and you cannot expect non-Long Islanders to pay $363 a year for a crossword.
No spoilers; the answers are in the comments.
By Michael Leddy at 8:58 AM comments: 3
Friday, October 29, 2021
Shipping
[Click for a larger view.]
I like this at least semi-dowdy logo, which I noticed on a shipping container in the parking lot of our friendly neighborhood multinational retailer.
See also today’s Zippy.
By Michael Leddy at 8:21 AM comments: 0
A serious sign
Fresca noticed a sign outside a liquor store: “BIKES LEFT HERE WILL BE THROWN ONTO LAKE ST.” That store isn’t playing.
By Michael Leddy at 8:14 AM comments: 0
Thursday, October 28, 2021
Meta
I plan to continue to use the word meta in its traditional (since 1988!) sense. I will not cede this word to Mark Zuckerberg.
[No, thanks.]
I presume the blue loop is meant to suggest infinity. I prefer to think of it as pair of handcuffs. Lemme out, Mark! Or maybe it’s head hitting itself against a mirror. Again, lemme out, &c. Elaine sees a Möbius strip. (Go back two sentences.)
I thought the following image was someone’s joke, but it’s credited to Facebook. Look! Mark is choosing an avatar. And I think of the Bhagavad-Gita: “Now I am become death, the destroyer of worlds.”
[Poverty of imagination, with everything at its disposal. This is progress?]
I doubt that Mark Zuckerberg has read Steven Millhauser’s 1996 novel Martin Dressler: The Tale of an American Dreamer, which might serve as a cautionary tale about the difficulty of replacing one world with another. Talk about handcuffs and mirrors.
[The Zuckerberg presentation is here. But I’m done thinking about the (so-called) metaverse.]
By Michael Leddy at 4:29 PM comments: 0
“More traditional”?
I started turning pages in the October 25 New Yorker and found a listing for a Brooklyn jazz festival: Kurt Elling, Cecile McLoren Savant, and others. And then: “the Sun Ra Arkestra — led by nonagenarian saxophonist Marshall Allen — represent more traditional fare.”
What’s up with “more traditional”? More traditional than a singer singing a great American standard? I wondered whether the writer assumed, given Marshall Allen’s age, that the Arkestra is some old-timey outfit. But no, the writer knows jazz. So perhaps “more traditional” is a wink of sorts, given that the Arkestra (which has outlived Ra) has been going since the early 1950s.
I was hoping to see the Arkestra in April 2020: they were scheduled to play a free concert at a theater in east-central Illinois. But everything changed.
By Michael Leddy at 1:40 PM comments: 0
“The key to this disorder”
James Baldwin, Giovanni’s Room (1956).
Related reading
All OCA Baldwin posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:37 AM comments: 0
Wednesday, October 27, 2021
PLEASE
[A genuine sign.]
I photographed this sign in a medical building some time ago. Tororo’s photograph of a mirror under repair made me think of this photograph, look for it, and post it.
This sign must have been meant as a warning to employees with deconstructive tendencies. Hands off the signifier and the signified! Notice the tape at the top: this sign about a sign must have been a placeholder for an even more portentous signifier.
Related reading
All OCA signage posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:48 AM comments: 4
Chicago pronouns
“This quiz is looking for answers that reflect formally correct usage, which won’t necessarily coincide with common usage.” It’s a Chicago Manual of Style quiz: “Who, Me?” It’s about subject and object pronouns.
Gotta wonder if this quiz was prompted by John McWhorter’s recent defense of me as a subject pronoun. Him and me disagree about that.
A related post
John McWhorter’s me
By Michael Leddy at 8:41 AM comments: 0
Stefan Zweig’s diaries
For the first time in English, Stefan Zweig’s diaries, 1931–1940. Here’s a review.
Related reading
All OCA Stefan Zweig posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:32 AM comments: 0