I’m remembering the 90s so hard right now, damn.
I’m remembering the 90s so hard right now, damn.
Parents considering legal action over school yoga
AP report on the latest crisis gripping American schools: free yoga classes:
A group of parents is bent out of shape by free yoga classes at schools in this San Diego County beachside community, fearing they are indoctrinating youngsters in eastern religion.
“There’s a deep concern that the Encinitas Union School District is using taxpayer resources to promote Ashtanga yoga and Hinduism, a religion system of beliefs and practices,” the parents’ attorney, Dean Broyles, told the North County Times.
Ring the alarum-bell!
Wikipedia:
Parahawking is an activity that combines paragliding with falconry. Birds of prey are trained to fly with paragliders, guiding them to thermals for in-flight rewards and performing aerobatic manoeuvres.
(Via Julio Capote.)
Court Upholds the Taxation of Lap Dances
James Barron writing for The New York Times on an important legal development in the world of performance art:
[New York] state’s highest court, the Court of Appeals, ruled on Tuesday that the lap dances performed at Nite Moves were not “dramatic or musical arts performances,” as Nite Moves had argued. The 4-to-3 decision said that Nite Moves did not qualify for the kind of tax exemption that ballet companies and Broadway producers are allowed to claim.
This type of judicial suppression of the arts is pretty disgusting.
Will Leitch, writing on Sports on Earth:
The disconnect between the way advanced statistics are used in baseball front offices — the Philadelphia Phillies perhaps being the lone, stubborn exception — and the way they are used in media coverage of baseball is so vast that you’d almost think television is covering a different sport entirely. Inside the world of baseball, WAR and OPS+ and so on are simply the way general managers and team staff talk about their jobs, the way CPAs talk about spreadsheets and financial advisors discuss Roth IRAs, the way any profession talks about anything.
But outside, on our televisions, they’re treated as some wonky dork sorcery, pencil pushers trying to pretend they understand baseball more than those who have far more experience (and who may currently be wearing protective cups). Baseball broadcasters treat advanced statistics like Billy Bush and other red-carpet Oscar idiots would treat an experimental short film about lesbian sects in Uganda. They act like they don’t matter, when, in many cases, they’re almost all that does. It would be as if political reporters said, “Who cares about all those math nerds in their mother’s basements with their ‘electoral college’ charts? I want to know what’s in these candidates’ hearts.”
It’s attitudes like this that keep me coming back to baseball on the radio. Which is not to say that radio broadcasters are throwing around BABIP and xFIP. But that the anti-intellectual, vapid, “go git ‘em boys” locker room atmosphere that you hear on most TV broadcasts is nowhere to be found. Maybe because there’s no room for it with all the play-by-play. Maybe because there is a long, proud tradition of calling baseball on the radio with respect, verve and aplomb. Maybe for other reasons entirely.
New Iceland constitution passes popular referendum
Last year, I posted about Iceland’s ongoing effort to write a new constitution. Well, the council writing the draft finished their work, and on Saturday, Iceland’s citizens voted on whether to adopt it. Paul Fontaine writing for The Reykjavík Grapevine:
The results are as follows:
1. Do you wish the Constitution Council’s proposals to form the basis of a new draft Constitution? Yes: 66.3% No: 33.7%
…
Of the 236,941 in Iceland with the right to vote in this election, 115,814 took part, giving a turnout of 48.9%
It now heads to the Icelandic parliament, which is delightfully named the Althingi.
Here’s the trailer for “A Few Dollars More”. I rewatched it recently and was blown away yet again by the amazing photography. I’m still up in the air on the plot. On the one hand, it’s complex and twisty and yet all the characters navigate through it with consistent motivations. On the other hand it may be so complex that it leaves little room for subtext.
In any case, this is a minor quibble. There’s enough interesting going on, visually, to make every subsequent viewing a chance to catch something new. This time around I noticed how smoking is frequently mapped to when a character is lying or otherwise fronting. Not an uncommon cinematic trope but it’s deployed a lot here.
One great scene for that is when Lee Van Cleef’s character and Clint Eastwood’s character are talking for the first time. I won’t spoil anything but just take careful note of when each character is smoking and not smoking.
Definitely one to look for on Blu-Ray.
Last week, I had the embarrassing affliction of not being able to name Kool & the Gang’s “Celebration.” Colin, of course, set me straight immediately, but this failure will remain with me until the end of my days.
Anyway here is “Celebration” by Kool & the Gang.
Wow. Horrifying, nightmarish treatment of a Norwegian woman by Amazon. They wiped her Kindle and closed her account and won’t tell her why. Martin Bekkelund:
As a long-term writer about technology, DRM, privacy and user rights, this Amazon example shows the very worst of DRM. If the retailer, in this case Amazon, thinks you’re a crook, they will throw you out and take away everything that you bought. And if you disagree, you’re totally outlawed. Not only is your account closed, all your books that you paid for are gone. With DRM, you don’t buy and own books, you merely rent them for as long as the retailer finds it convenient.
I understand why these total silence policies are in place — to keep crooks from getting a leg up on anti-fraud measures — but they are totally inhumane. This is a real woman’s account.
San Francisco Proposition F seeks plan to drain Hetch Hetchy Reservoir
John Wildermuth for the San Francisco Chronicle:
Proposition F would require [San Francisco] to put together a plan to destroy the city-owned O’Shaughnessy Dam and drain Hetch Hetchy Reservoir so that the valley, part of Yosemite National Park, can be restored to its original wild state.
…
The reservoir now is the keystone of a 160-mile-long system that serves 2.5 million people in San Francisco, the Peninsula and parts of Silicon Valley and the East Bay. While the system is made up of nine dams, Hetch Hetchy holds 85 percent of the available water.
This story has a little bit of everything: environmentalism vs. pragmatism, the right of a city to determine matters of other cities and a federal park, and politics, naturally.