Friday, June 10, 2022

Draw-your-own

The distillery was offering a draw-your-own-bottle option. You drew a shape and the distillery turned it into a bottle. I drew a bottle with a long sloping side that ended in a shallow puddle of glass. The bottle was to be filled with — with what? I didn’t know.

Related reading
All OCA dream posts (Pinboard)

[As Elaine points out, this dream is likely influenced by our reading of Dubliners.]

Thursday, June 9, 2022

Making it plain

“Donald Trump was at the center of this conspiracy”: Representative Bennie Thompson (D, MS-2), a few minutes ago.

*

“There will come a day when Donald Trump is gone, but your dishonor will remain”: Representative Liz Cheney (R, WY), a few minutes ago, addressing fellow Republicans who continue to, in her words, “defend the indefensible.”

Mystery actor

[Click for a larger view.]

The guys in the front seat are pretty recognizable. The one in the back, less so — I think.

You could probably take the names of the guys in the front, do a little searching, and come up with the name of the guy in the back. But Orange Crate Art works on the honor system.

Leave your guess(es) in the comments. I’ll drop a hint if one is needed.

*

The answer is now in the comments.

More mystery actors
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Domestic comedy

“I’m not a big fan of Errol Flynn. But at least it’s not a swashbuckling movie.”

“It’s post-swashbuckle.”

“He’s too old to buckle or swash.”

Related reading
All OCA domestic comedy posts (Pinboard)

[“It”: The Big Boodle (dir. Richard Wilson, 1957). We didn’t see it through.]

Wednesday, June 8, 2022

Barometers

Mr. Farrington has been humiliated at his office. He will never finish copying the contract by the end of the workday. His mind begins to wander to “the glare and rattle of the public-house.”

James Joyce, “Counterparts,” in Dubliners (1914).

That sentence later began a novel:

Charles Jackson, The Lost Weekend (1944).

Related reading
All OCA James Joyce posts (Pinboard)

Domestic comedy

“It’s true!”

“Everything Roz Chast says is true!”

Related reading
All OCA domestic comedy posts (Pinboard)

[Context: a Roz Chast drawing of a box of Crayolas. The built-in sharpener is labeled “Black Hole of Doom” and “Will Break Crayon.”]

Tuesday, June 7, 2022

Love and grammar

Bob Doran, boarding house resident, and Polly Mooney, daughter of Mrs. Mooney, the house’s proprietor, have sinned. Mr. Doran has confessed to the priest. Polly and her mother (a silent observer of her daughter’s doings) have talked things over, and Mrs. Mooney wants to speak to Mr. Doran, who wonders whether to marry or flee. Will his family look down on Polly?

James Joyce, “The Boarding House,” in Dubliners (1914).

Related reading
All OCA James Joyce posts (Pinboard)

[Mrs. Mooney’s silence is purposeful: “she thought of some mothers she knew who could not get their daughters off their hands.” That Mrs. Mooney is known to her boarders as The Madam (Joyce’s italics) tells us everything about her management of her daughter’s life.]

Trump on Trial

From the Brookings Institution, a free PDF: Trump on Trial: A Guide to the January 6 Hearings and the Question of Criminality.

The first hearing: this Thursday at 8:00 p.m. Eastern.

Monday, June 6, 2022

How to improve writing (no. 102)

From a New York Times obituary for the dance teacher Martha Myers:

Ms. Myers was diminutive — the 1998 newspaper article said she described herself as “5 feet 2 inches and shrinking” — but impactful.
Diminutive seems to me an odd word to apply to a person, at least as a predicate adjective. Perhaps the writer thought short pejorative?

As for impactful, Garner’s Modern English Usage calls it
barbarous jargon dating from the mid-1960s. Unlike other adjectives ending in -ful, it cannot be idiomatically rendered in the phrase full of [+ quality], as in beautiful (= full of beauty), regretful (= full of regret), scornful (= full of scorn), and spiteful (= full of spite). If impact truly denotes a quality, it does so only in its newfangled uses as a verb <it impacts us all> and as an adjective <the mechanic’s tool known as an impact driver>.

Whatever its future may be, *impactful is, for now, a word to be scorned. Among its established replacements are influential and powerful.
One need not find the point about -ful persuasive to cringe a bit at impactful.

Back to the Times. How about this sentence instead?
Ms. Myers was slight of stature — the 1998 newspaper article said she described herself as “5 feet 2 inches and shrinking” — but mighty.
And to remove the interruption when quoting from the article cited earlier in the obituary:
Just “5 feet 2 inches and shrinking,” as she said in the 1998 newspaper article, Ms. Myers was slight of stature but mighty.
Related reading
All OCA How to improve writing posts (Pinboard)

[This post is no. 102 in a series dedicated to improving stray bits of public prose.]

Our tube

From oldest to youngest: Charles Lane, Arthur Space, Whitman Mayo, and Matthew Broderick, all in the Lou Grant episode “Generations” (January 26, 1981). Familiar faces in new arrangements: one of the pleasures of television. See also these arrangements.

[Charles Lane’s face should be familiar to any I Love Lucy viewer. Arthur Space: Doc Weaver on Lassie. Whitman Mayo: Grady Wilson on Sanford and Son.]