Wednesday, May 1, 2024

When publications collide

From the April 30 installment of the NPR feature Trump’s Trials:

“The jury saw text messages between [Keith] Davidson and leadership at American Media, Inc., which published the National Esquire.”
[Perhaps a result of a reference earlier in the broadcast to Esquire Deposition Solutions.]

Mystery actor

[Click for a larger view.]

Ideas? Anyone? Leave your guesses in the comments. I’ll drop a hint if one is needed.

*

No need: the answer is now in the comments.

More mystery actors (Collect them all)
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The Record Collector, for sale

Los Angeles’s oldest record store, The Record Collector, is for sale: $4,995,000 for the building, the store’s half millon LPs not included.

Our fambly visited The Record Collector in 2016. My assessment, written then: “One curmudgeonly owner, one assistant, many, many LPs.” I bought two (Dizzy Gillespie and Oscar Peterson, Don Cherry and Steve Lacy), which the owner appeared to price out of his head.

You can read other customers’ reviews at Yelp.

Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Nihilism in disguise

Post by @aaron.rupar
View on Threads

I think he’s right. When I see a local “progressives” group use the hashtag #BidenCrimeFamily and post a picture of a pitchman holding a Ukrainian flag with the caption “Look how easily it absorbs your money!” I know that we’re in dangerous times.

[The picture with the flag, by the way, comes from Turning Point Action. There’s your horseshoe.]

TypeIt4Me

I just began using TypeIt4Me, “the original text expander for Mac,” and recommend it with enthusiasm. Though I’m not especially tech-oriented, I've been making shortcuts since the days of the Apple //c and MacroWorks. On Macs, I used TextExpander for many years, until costly updates and a subscription model prompted me to switch to aText. Alas, the interface of the newer aText for Sonoma didn’t appeal to me at all, so I went looking for an alternative.

Typeit4Me is fast, good-looking, and intuitive. It’s plainly great. The app’s testimonial page has words of praise from all sorts of Mac users, including Steve Wozniak. The app is free to try, $19.99 to buy (no subscription). My only connection is that of a happy user.

One example of what TypeIt4Me does for me: if I type a comma followed by newsday, I get

Today’s Newsday  Saturday Stumper, by

Some clue-and-answer pairs of note:

My favorite in this puzzle:

No spoilers; the answers are in the comments.

Adding links to Pinboard

The best ways I know to add a link to Pinboard:

~ A bookmarklet by Jay Sitter. If you don’t use a bookmarks bar (I don’t), you can be sneaky and a create a bookmark for any page and change its name and URL. Or you can create a text-expansion shortcut to drop in the long line of JavaScript.

~ A Safari extension by Kristof Adriaenssens, bookmarker for pinboard.

If you’re me, it’s good to have both. I use the bookmarklet to inventory Orange Crate Art posts. I use the extension with a second account to save links for future reference.

I was going to recommend Mathias Lindholm’s free app Simplepin for iOS, but I just discovered that it’s been sunsetted and is no longer available in the App Store. Oh well.

Monday, April 29, 2024

Recently updated

Fred’s Ping Pong Now with sports betting.

Pharm-speak

From a commercial for Gardasil 9, one in an endless stream of pharmaceutical commercials on MSNBC: “Fainting can also happen.”

Translation: “You might faint.”

“Something” for Duke Ellington’s birthday

“Something” is the fourth section of The Goutleas Suite, recorded April 27, 1971. The suite memorializes Ellington’s 1966 visit to the restored thirteenth-century Château de Goutelas. From his spoken remarks on the occasion, as given in his Music Is My Mistress (1973):

“To be here to help celebrate the rebuilding of this beautiful château by men who came together from the greatest extremes of religious, political, and intellectual beliefs is an experience, and a majestic manifestation of humanism, that I shall never forget. They did not merely make a donation that others might roll up their sleeves to work; they rolled up their own sleeves and worked. To be accepted as a brother by these heroic human beings leaves me breathless.”
I chose “Something,” of all things, for two reasons: it captures the luminous serenity that I hear in a number of late Ellington recordings, and it brings to mind a well-known comment from André Previn:
“You know, Stan Kenton can stand in front of a thousand fiddles and a thousand brass and make a dramatic gesture and every studio arranger can nod his head and say, Oh, yes, that’s done like this. But Duke merely lifts his finger, three horns make a sound, and I don’t know what it is!”
I think the three horns at the beginning of “Something” are flute, tenor saxophone, and trumpet. That’s my guess.

Related reading
All OCA Ellington posts (Pinboard) : Ellington at Goutelas (A Life photograph)

[Personnel: Cootie Williams, Mercer Ellington, Money Johnson, Eddie Preston, trumpets; Booty Wood, Malcolm Taylor, Chuck Connors, trombones; Harold Minerve, Norris Turney, Paul Gonsalves, Harold Ashby, Harry Carney, reeds; Duke Ellington, composer and piano; Joe Benjamin, bass; Rufus Jones, drums. The recording was first available on The Ellington Suites (Pablo, 1976), and is now available on CD (OJC, 2013).]

On Duke Ellington’s birthday

Edward Kennedy Ellington was born on April 29, 1899, 125 years ago today. “There never was another,” as Ellington himself said of James P. Johnson.

Here, from 1988, is a PBS documentary in two parts: A Duke Named Ellington. Great archival footage, great interviews with Ellington and other musicians.

Related reading
All OCA Duke Ellington posts (Pinboard)