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26 Oct 03:54

The Propaganda Precursor to “The Act of Killing”

by Jon Emont

On the evening of September 30th, hundreds of men from the Islamic Defenders Front, an Indonesian hard-line Muslim group, streamed into a large square in east Jakarta. They had come to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the murder of six anti-Communist Indonesian generals by left-wing conspirators, including members of the Indonesian Communist Party (Partai Komunis Indonesia or P.K.I.). Fifty years ago, Suharto, one of the few surviving major generals, responded by assuming control of the military and routing the poorly organized left-wing plotters. He portrayed their plot as an attempted coup and used it as a justification for rounding up and murdering hundreds of thousands of alleged Communists throughout Indonesia. Today, Indonesia’s state officials continue to support the Suharto line: that the generals’ murders represented a full-blown coup attempt and that the 1965 killings prevented an otherwise imminent Communist takeover. Fifty years after the event that set the mass murder in motion, the men in the courtyard had come to watch a film about the slaughter.

See the rest of the story at newyorker.com

Related:
My Favorite Halloween Movie
David Lynch’s Elusive Language
What’s Missing from “The Martian”
24 Oct 04:25

Happy Mole Day!

by Tom Levenson

Yo! Avogadro fans!

Today is our day!

I’m a little late getting this post up, as Mole Day ends at 6:02 p.m

Remember:  that equal number of molecules of a gas occupy equal volumes under the same temperature and pressure is not just a good idea.

IT’S THE LAW.

…for which insight Amadeo Avogadro received the honor of having his name attached to the number of molecules that make up one mole of a substance, a number set by convention as the number of carbon 12 atoms that add up to 12 grams of the substance. That number:  6.02*10^23.  Hence, Mole Day, running from 6:02 a.m. to 6:02 p.m on 10/23.

In Avogadro’s honor, a tune:


Geek out, my friends, and discuss whatever amongst yourselves.

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24 Oct 04:24

Extremely Iowa

by Jamelle Bouie
kurtadb

blarg. history of progressive firsts, but also of engendering christianist prez candidates.

Iowa Republicans do more than endure fringe candidates—they embrace them. In Iowa, factional candidates excel and extremists find ground to run. In 1988, Pat Robertson took a strong second in the Iowa caucuses. In 1996, another Pat—Pat Buchanan—came close to toppling Bob Dole. In 2008, Mike Huckabee won the contest, and in 2012, Rick Santorum won a slim victory over Mitt Romney. And ahead of the 2016 Republican presidential contest, Iowa Republicans are poised to give their votes to retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson.

According to the latest poll from Bloomberg Politics and the Des Moines Register, Carson is ahead of the pack with 28 percent of the vote. But more interesting are the facts behind his rise. Iowans aren’t just charmed by his demeanor, his experience, and his inexperience as a politician and policymaker—although that’s definitely true—they also support his most controversial, and entirely ludicrous, ideas.

Bloomberg Politics and the Des Moines Iowa Register asked respondents which views were “very attractive,” “mostly attractive,” “mostly unattractive,” and “very unattractive.” It starts off as you would expect. Eighty-five percent of respondents say Carson’s lack of experience is mostly or very attractive; 88 percent say the same for his skill as a neurosurgeon, while 49 percent say it’s unattractive that he has little experience with foreign policy. Routine, so far.

But then it goes off the rails. Two years ago, at the Values Voter Summit, Carson said that the Affordable Care Act—designed to increase health coverage for millions of uninsured Americans—was the “worst thing that has happened in this country since slavery,” which trapped millions of people in brutal hereditary bondage for more than two centuries. American slavery was a disgraceful chapter in our history that still shapes the structure of our society. Obamacare, by contrast, has delivered insurance and health services to 17.6 million people.

What do Iowa Republicans think? Eighty-one percent say this makes him a “mostly” or “very” attractive candidate.

Last month, Carson voiced opposition to a hypothetical Muslim president. “I would not advocate that we put a Muslim in charge of this nation. I absolutely would not agree with that,” he said. This, despite the Constitution’s clear dictate on religious tests—they’re verboten. What do Iowa Republicans think? Seventy-seven percent say this makes him a “mostly” or “very” attractive candidate.

Two weeks ago, Carson said that guns—in the hands of German Jews—could have slowed Adolf Hitler and even stopped the Holocaust. “I think the likelihood of Hitler being able to accomplish his goals would have been greatly diminished if the people have been armed,” he said. Historians think this is ludicrous. “I can think of no serious work of scholarship on the Nazi dictatorship or the causes of the Holocaust in which Nazi gun control measures feature as a significant factor,” wrote Alan Steinweis for the New York Times. Armed Jews, especially in the years before the war, might have stopped some Nazi violence, but given Kristallnacht—whose pretext was the assassination of a German diplomat by a German-born Jewish refugee in France—it’s just as possible that it would have led to more and worse reprisals for German Jews. Above all, the possibility of more guns does nothing for the vast majority of Jewish victims—Russians, Poles, Hungarians, and others—who were trapped between the Nazi war machine and the Soviet army.

What do Iowa Republicans think? A whopping 77 percent say that Carson’s statement makes him “very” or “mostly” attractive. Overall—presumably based on his beliefs and opinions—96 percent of Iowa Republicans are attracted by “common sense”-based approach to issues. If there’s an area where respondents were unhappy, it’s with Carson’s fetal tissue research as a neurosurgeon. Forty-eight percent find it “mostly” or “very” unattractive. Still, the retired doctor is stunningly popular with Iowa Republicans—84 percent have a favorable view of him.

None of this means Carson will win. The vast majority of Iowa Republicans are still undecided. As the caucus comes closer, their preference might change. And other candidates, like Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, are also popular with GOP voters in the state. What it does mean, if anything, is that Carson speaks the language of Iowa Republicans. They like his rhetoric, whether it’s absurd, ignorant, or genuinely offensive.

With that said, Carson will fade; he has cash, but he doesn’t have a campaign. His money, for the most part, goes to raising more money, not to staffers, offices, or an infrastructure. But when he does, it will be because Republican voters got serious, not because of what he said. And that—if you care about the outcomes of American politics, and not just the spectacle—is troubling.

24 Oct 04:23

Friday Recipe Exchange: What’s in the Pantry?

by TaMara (BHF)
kurtadb

these are some pretty good food pics, which are not easy.

_DSC9333 [1024x768]

Tonight we are raiding the pantry, freezer and refrigerator to come up with quick and flavorful dinner recipes. From the blog:

The sun is peaking through the clouds after two days of excellent rain. A little thunder, a steady drizzle and snow in the mountains, perfect Colorado fall.

Tonight’s recipe exchange was prompted by a friend of mine who recently lost her husband. I was working at her house and she asked me to come into the kitchen and began going through her pantry, freezer and refrigerator and filling a bag for me with things she didn’t think she’d be able to use. She doesn’t really like to cook much and cooking for one can be a challenge. That’s when I had an idea. I asked her if I could come over every once in a while and cook for her and use up a lot of these amazing ingredients. Her husband was a bit of gourmet, so the whole kitchen is filled with mouth-watering things.

What sold her on the idea was my desire to just pop in, look around the kitchen and come up with something on the spot based on what ingredients sparked my imagination. She thought that sounded like fun and I agree. One of the things I’m really looking forward to is using the black rice. I’ve never cooked with it before.

So for tonight, I went looking through my recipe files to find the ones that started out as a “whatever is in the pantry” meals. They are rarely the same thing twice, but I put the basics in a recipe.

Here are a few:

Pineapple and Bacon Fried Rice is one of the reasons I keep Ponzu Sauce on hand. Click here for that recipe and click here to see all of JeffreyW’s photos and recipes for a variety of fried rice dishes (including the one pictured above).

Pasta is always a great base for a quick dinner. Here is my Pasta Rustica, (basic recipe click here), that can include any number of items from your vegetable drawer or freezer.

DSC_4715 [1600x1200]

Of course JeffreyW has a great photo of Beef and Broccoli. Yum.

Spicy Beef and Broccoli (click here) is one of my favorite dinners to make with sirloin. And it’s great if you forgot to take the meat out to thaw until late. There is also a full menu, recipes and shopping list at that link.

I thought I hated vegetables, until I had Stir Fried Vegetables in a Bread Bowl, (recipe here) at a local restaurant. Quick and easy, serve over rice or noodles if your basket weaving skills are minimal (that would be me).

Finally, the weekly dinner menu starts with a basic recipe that you can jazz up with whatever you have on hand, Beef Vegetable Soup and Apple Pumpkin Butter. Menu, recipes and shopping list are here.

What are your go-to “raid the pantry” meals? Are there ingredients you always keep on hand for quick dinners? What’s on the menu for the weekend? I’m not sure there will be a recipe exchange next week, I’m hosting a dinner. Stay tuned…

For tonight’s featured recipe, I kept it as simple as it gets. If you can’t find pineapple salsa, JeffreyW has a recipe for it.

Frijoles Ananás

  • 2-15 oz cans pinto beans, drained and rinsed
  • 16 oz pineapple salsa
  • 1 tsp to 1 tbsp chili powder (start with 1 tsp and add more to taste)
  • 1/4  tsp to 1 tsp cayenne pepper (start with 1/4 tsp and add more to taste)
  • 1/4 cup chopped cilantro

To serve:

  • 8 oz shredded cheddar
  • 6 to 8 taco size tortillas, warmed

saucepan

Add beans, salsa and spices to a saucepan, bring to a low boil for 1 minute, reduce heat and let simmer 10 minutes, add cilantro and simmer for 5 additional minutes. Serve with cheese and tortillas.

If you want to make it a one-pot meal, add corn or cubed zucchini to the mix for a complete dinner. Serves 4 generously.

That’s it for this week. Have a great weekend – TaMara

ETA: I have several facebook friend requests on hold. If you’ve sent me a friend request – email me and let me know, I try not to friend unknowns, but happy to friend any Balloon-Juice crew.

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23 Oct 16:55

The very first episode of The Joy of Painting

by Jason Kottke
kurtadb

it's the AMSR super bowl! or something.

The Joy of Painting, hosted by Bob Ross, ran for 11 years on public television for a total of more than 400 episodes. The very first episode ever broadcast was just uploaded to Ross' YouTube channel.

Tags: art   Bob Ross   video
23 Oct 16:54

The electronic music map

by Jason Kottke

Dorothy Electronica Map

From Dorothy, a beautiful print of the history of electronic music mapped onto the circuit board of a theremin, one of the first electronic instruments.

Our Electric Love Blueprint celebrates over 200 inventors, innovators, composers and musicians who (in our opinion) have been pivotal to the evolution of electronic music from the invention of the earliest known sound recording device in 1857 to the present day. Key pioneers featured include Léon Theremin, Bob Moog, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Brian Eno, Kraftwerk, John Cage, New Order and Aphex Twin.

Tags: design   maps   music
23 Oct 15:38

This week in "What's Up with Lincoln Chafee": Withdrawing from the race, that's what's up

Goodbye, old friend. Scott Olson/Getty Images

Welcome to the final installment of What's Up With Lincoln Chafee, a somewhat-less-than-weekly series at Vox in which we checked in on the life and times of former moderate Republican senator turned independent governor of Rhode Island turned Democratic presidential candidate Lincoln Chafee.

Tragic news, Chaficionados. The heavyweight from the Plantation State is out of the 2016 race:

BREAKING: Former Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee says he's dropping out of Democratic presidential race.

— The Associated Press (@AP) October 23, 2015

This news wasn't totally unexpected. Speculation of an exist arose Thursday night after Linc was overheard talking about his imminent withdrawal from the race at Dave's Market, the #1 independent grocer in the state of Rhode Island:

@LincolnChafee sources at Daves market say you were overheard in frozen food aisle yesterday, on your cell, saying you were ending campaign?

— John DePetro Radio (@JohnDePetroshow) October 23, 2015

The Chafester made it official during a speech to the Democratic National Committee's Women's Leadership Forum in Washington, DC, at which he received all the respect from establishment Democrats to which he's become accustomed during this campaign:

Aw man. Announcer mispronounces Chafee's name, as he arrives on stage to drop out of presidential.

— Alexandra Jaffe (@ajjaffe) October 23, 2015

"Do we want to be remembered as a bomber of weddings and hospitals?"

Chafee's actual speech focused on what's been the main theme of his campaign all along: the need for a less hawkish foreign policy.

"After much thought I have decided to end my campaign for president today," he explained. "I would like to take this opportunity one last time to advocate for a chance be given to peace."

This being a forum on women's leadership, the speech began with a few awkward nods at how women are better, less warlike leaders than men. Chafee even saw fit to cite Aristophanes's Lysistrata as an explanation of why women are needed in foreign affairs:

Since today is all about women’s leadership it reminds me of one of my favorite Greek plays; Lysistrata, a comedy from about 400 BCE by Aristophanes. In that play, a group of women, fed up with the war mongering of their husbands, agree to withhold their favors until peace returns. And it worked!

Anyway, let’s talk about the present.

"Anyway" indeed. Even more unfortunate was the next paragraph, which devolves into benevolent sexist speculation about women being less selfish than men:

Studies show that women tend to lead differently than men, in that women are more likely to be collaborative and team oriented. It is undeniable the benefits women provide to the pursuit of peace.

But once that throat-clearing is done, the rest of the speech focused entirely on the failures of American military adventurism. The US, Chafee noted, has no real rivals when it comes to military capability. This is obviously correct, but it's rare to hear national politicians admit it outright:

When I was a senator, a general from the Pentagon testified before the Foreign Relations Committee on global military powers. I asked him who was second to the U.S. in military might? He thought for a bit and said, "probably the U.K." Yes that was a few years ago but the point remains true: no real rival to the United States exists when it comes to total weaponry and deployment potential.

And yet, Chafee argues, this power isn't a sufficient tool for achieving American objectives abroad: "We are sinking ever deeper and deeper into an endless morass in the Middle East and North Africa. People keep dying, and peace seems further and further away. It’s evident that all this military power isn’t working for us right now."

By the end, Chafee was making a full-throated critique of the Obama administration's — and especially Hillary Clinton's — interventionism, especially as far as the drone war is concerned:

The United States of America is so strong militarily, economically and culturally that we can take chances for peace. In fact, as a strong mature world leader, we must take chances for peace. If we have courage, if we take risks, we can have Prosperity through Peace, not just in the United States, but all over the world.

Do we want to be remembered as a bomber of weddings and hospitals? Or do we want to be remembered as Peacemakers, as pioneers of a more harmonious world?

If American war veterans and Vietcong fighters can laugh together on the Fourth of July, then I know so too can Iranians and Israelis, Shias and Sunnis, Turks and Kurds.

This might seem Kumbayaish — though as Chafee notes earlier in the speech, US veterans and Vietcong fighters really did have a Fourth of July reunion in DaNang this year.

But the speech is a reminder that Chafee's was the only truly antiwar campaign of the 2016 cycle. He was the only Republican Senator to vote against the Iraq war in 2002; he opposes the Obama administration's anti-ISIS airstrikes; he calls drone strikes "extrajudicial assassinations." Bernie Sanders opposed the war in Iraq too, but he supports drone strikes (albeit only when used "very selectively") and the anti-ISIS strikes. And he barely talks about foreign policy, let alone criticize Hillary Clinton for her super-hawkish record.

That left Chafee as the only candidate in the race critiquing Clinton from the left on foreign affairs, the issue on which she differs from the Democratic base the most. That was the opening that Obama used to beat her in 2008, and yet none of her 2016 challengers but Chafee tried to exploit it. Chafee was never going to win. But he was trying to spark a genuine debate about whether more or less perpetual American military operations in the Middle East and Central Asia are really wise. He never really succeeded, and with him gone, the chance of Clinton being seriously challenged on these points has apparently evaporated.

We'll always have our memories

These are sad times, Chaficionados. But let's not forget the good times the Chafee campaign brought us:

  • Remember when Wolf Blitzer abandoned all pretense of impartiality and straight-up begged Chafee to drop out of the race?

It was quite a ride, Chafee 2016. I'm sad it's over. We'll miss you, big guy.

Must credit SNL’s Kyle Moody, who called Chafee dropping out weeks ago: pic.twitter.com/JuRa4dS02J

— Nick Corasaniti (@NYTnickc) October 23, 2015

Awesome, share it:

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23 Oct 13:46

RTD announces Union Station-to-DIA rail line will open April 22, 2016

by By Monte Whaley The Denver Post
Travelers will be able to take commuter rail from Denver Union Station to Denver International Airport starting April 22, 2016, at a cost of $9.
23 Oct 03:49

Should Black Lives Matter Focus on 'Black-on-Black' Murders?

Over the years, John McWhorter, a linguistics scholar at Columbia University, and Glenn Loury, a Brown University economist, have conducted a series of…
22 Oct 22:03

Construction begins on I-70 bike path near Genesee

by By Josie Klemaier YourHub Reporter
kurtadb

this could be fun, mike

Construction began this month on the missing link to a complete off-highway bike route along Interstate 70 between Denver and Glenwood Springs.
22 Oct 21:42

How climate change will affect world economies

by Jason Kottke

Climate change economics map

A new study from scientists and economists at Stanford and Berkeley has taken a stab at determining how climate change will affect the world's economic activity. As part of their study, they look at which countries might benefit from climate change and which might lose out. As you might expect, countries in the Northern Hemisphere with cooler climates stand to benefit while the rest of the world will not. Here are some of the projected big winners (the Nordic countries) and losers (the Middle East):

Mongolia +1413%
Finland +516%
Iceland +513%
Russia +419%
Estonia +259%

Saudi Arabia -96%
Kuwait -96%
Oman -94%
United Arab Emirates -94%
Iraq -93%

Canada (+247%) is another one of the potential big winners while the US (-36%) stands to lose out...along with all of Africa, South America, India, and China. This quote by one of the study's lead authors, really grabbed me by the throat:

What climate change is doing is basically devaluing all the real estate south of the United States and making the whole planet less productive. Climate change is essentially a massive transfer of value from the hot parts of the world to the cooler parts of the world. This is like taking from the poor and giving to the rich.

Among other many things, anthropogenic climate change is an issue of discrimination.1 Rich, predominantly white countries caused the problem and can do the most to limit the damage, but climate change will disproportionately affect poor countries, poor people (even in rich countries), women, and people of color. The rich need to do something about it so that the poor will not suffer. The problem is, the world's wealthy have a long history of not being incentivized to help anyone but themselves. I hope this will turn out differently...or, as sometimes happens, the desires of the wealthy and the needs of the poor dovetail into action of joint benefit.

  1. In fact, with no offense to those who rightly rail against causes of discrimination around the world, I would go so far to say that this is by far the largest and most important discriminatory issue the world faces today. Climate change will permanently remake the entire world and its economy, and the poor, women, and people of color stand to lose huge.

Tags: economics   global warming   science
22 Oct 17:39

Study: quantum entanglement is real

by Jason Kottke

The scientists who conducted a study at the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands say they have proved that quantum entanglement is a real effect.

The Delft researchers were able to entangle two electrons separated by a distance of 1.3 kilometers, slightly less than a mile, and then share information between them. Physicists use the term "entanglement" to refer to pairs of particles that are generated in such a way that they cannot be described independently. The scientists placed two diamonds on opposite sides of the Delft University campus, 1.3 kilometers apart.

Each diamond contained a tiny trap for single electrons, which have a magnetic property called a "spin." Pulses of microwave and laser energy are then used to entangle and measure the "spin" of the electrons.

The distance -- with detectors set on opposite sides of the campus -- ensured that information could not be exchanged by conventional means within the time it takes to do the measurement.

The study, published in Nature, has yet to be verified, but still, exciting!

Tags: physics   quantum mechanics   science
22 Oct 03:46

Rampage Killings Get Attention, but Gun Violence Is Constant

The Chicago police investigated a shooting last month with several victims, including an infant. September was the city’s deadliest month in recent years. Scott…
21 Oct 20:24

The food deserts of the United States

by Jason Kottke

Food Deserts

From Nathan Yau at FlowingData, a look at the places in the US where people need to make the longest drives to visit a grocery store.

The nearest grocery store is more than 10 miles away in about 36 percent of the country and the median distance is 7 miles. However, a lot of these areas are rural with few (if any) people who live there.

Wyoming contains very few grocery stores:

Food Deserts

And Nevada is even more of a food desert. Looks like Massachusetts, Delaware, and New Jersey have plenty of grocery stores everywhere. (via feltron)

Tags: food   infoviz   maps   Nathan Yau   USA
20 Oct 21:01

Quentin Tarantino's desired cast list for Pulp Fiction

by Jason Kottke

Pulp Fiction Cast

Pulp Fiction Cast

Quentin Tarantino is the type of writer/director who writes roles in movies with specific actors in mind. For Pulp Fiction, he wanted Harvey Keitel to play Winston Wolf, Tim Roth to play Pumpkin, and Ving Rhames to play Marcellus Wallace. But he also wanted Michael Madsen to play Vincent (with Travolta as a strong second choice), John Cusack to play Lance, Matt Dillon to play Butch, and Laurence Fishburne to play Jules. Another possibility for Jules was Eddie Murphy, and Tarantino also specified "No Rappers" for that role. Bruce Willis and Uma Thurman weren't even listed for their respective roles. Gary Oldman, Nicholas Cage, Johnny Depp, and Alec Baldwin were considered for several roles but ultimately didn't appear in the film.

Here's the full list. (via open culture)

Tags: movies   Pulp Fiction   Quentin Tarantino
20 Oct 19:29

The Colts' explanation for their botched trick play somehow makes it seem even stupider

kurtadb

delicious

At first, this looked like an individual failure on a play we didn't understand. Now it's a play we understand and a massive coaching failure. That's worse!

Sunday night the Colts ran a trick play so baffling it made me question why the NFL didn't immediately call off the game and preemptively end their season to avoid something so stupid from happening again. I took a while attempting to analyze it.

At its core, the play's main flaw was that Griff Whalen, the WR-turned-center snapped the ball when nobody was expecting him to. But the play was also riddled with other flaws so massive that I couldn't figure out what the purpose of the play was outside of Whalen's mistake, or how the Colts' coaching staff allowed it to come into existence.

Tuesday morning, punter Pat McAfee gave the actual reasoning for the play and how it failed on an Indianapolis radio show and -- I can't believe I'm going to say this -- I think it's an even bigger coaching failure than I previously thought.

First, McAfee explained what the team was trying to do:

"The whole idea there was on fourth-and-3 or less, we shift to an alignment to where we could catch them misaligned," he said. "They tried to sub some people in. Catch them with more men on the field -- 12 men on the field. And if you get a certain look, you have three (or) two yards to make a play."

"So, you're trying to manipulate the (receiving team) into thinking they have to sub their defense back on," he said. "We are sprinting to the sideline in hopes to make the other team think we are subbing our offense back onto the field. So, when they think the offense is coming back on the field, your hope is that they think their defense has to come back on the field. As soon as their defense comes back on the field, we snap it, steal 5 yards and we get a first down."

OK, that's a thing. That's an actual football strategy. I'm on board with this. If you can convince the opponent to switch units, you'll almost definitely catch them with 12 men on the field and get a free first down.

There's actually some decent sideline acting: The Colts released a screenshot showing their offense huddled on the side of the field, as if ready to come on:

And if you look at the replay, you can see backup QB Matt Hasselbeck urging the punt team off the field -- like a backup QB might if they were actually signalling the punt team off the field:

But I think it's a bit flawed in execution. The shift looks like the disciplined hustle of a team shifting rather than the disorganized scramble of a unit trying to shift off the field. They even remain in formation. It just doesn't look enough like a punt unit leaving the field to convince a disciplined opponent. They get into their new formation well before the Patriots have ever considered swapping their team out.

And there's the three or four seconds when the new formation is in place and the safety-turned-QB Colt Anderson is still sprinting over to assume his new position. This needed to be disguised better. As the entire defense watches him get in place, the jig is up: They know this isn't a unit swapping, but rather a trick play. It's dead in the water.

I'll acknowledge that there was an actual strategy and premise here, which is better than I thought Sunday night. I'm still skeptical of whether the Colts should have bothered trying this.

The Patriots are a really well coached team, and a lot of their defensive players are already on their special teams unit. They probably know well enough not to switch from special teams to defense unless offensive players begin coming onto the field. According to NFLPenalties.com, the Pats haven't been called for a Defensive 12 men on the field penalty this year, nor were they called the entirety of last year's regular season or postseason. Designing a trick to catch them seems futile. This still seems like a kinda bad idea.

But then McAfee explained something more damning:

"The gunner who became the center all week was (safety) Clayton Geathers," McAfee said via the Colts' official website. "Clayton Geathers gets injured in the second quarter. Insert Griff Whalen who had never done it before. So, Griff Whalen is now the new center in a play he's never practiced before."

"We added something to try and draw them offsides if they don't do their substitution," he said. "Griff never got the heads up this was happening, because it's not in the playbook. Stanford guy, reads the playbook, knows everything he has to do, but if he's not there for an audible that's added, he can't know."

"Griff has no idea we're trying to draw the guy offsides," said McAfee, "because in the play it says if we get under center, snap it. So Colt Anderson (the quarterback on the play) is trying to draw a guy offsides to pick up an easy five yards. If not, we just don't snap it. We take a delay of game."

"Griff goes... ‘If I feel him right now, I'm supposed to snap it.' So this is a 100% miscommunication," said McAfee. "It's literally a miscommunication."

ohhhhhhhhhhhhhh jeez

oh no

jeez

As noted, it was obvious from the beginning that the screw-up was that Whalen snapped the ball when he shouldn't have. There were other problems, but that was the big one that made this all look so silly. Now we know why: He was in a role he had never filled before, with the team doing something he didn't know they were trying to do.

According to McAfee, this play had two successful scenarios. Either the Colts snapped the ball with the Patriots having 12 men on the field, or the Colts snapped the ball with the Patriots offsides. The most important thing here -- perhaps the only important thing! -- is that the person snapping the ball have a damn good idea of when to snap the ball.

The only person the Colts had trained to fill this role got hurt, and the team still ran the play.

That's a massive coaching failure. When a player filling a critical role in a trick play comes out of the game, you have to just throw it away. Those types of plays require everybody to execute nearly perfectly to function. You can't just throw in another person and expect them to pick it up on the fly.

The job of a coach is to put their players in a position to succeed. Chuck Pagano and the Colts' staff put their players in a position to fail. At first this looked like an individual screw-up on a weird play that maybe could've worked. Now we know it's worse than that.

* * *

SB Nation presents: The most impressive teams in Week 6

20 Oct 19:06

Fort Collins rejects allowing women to go topless in public

by By Elizabeth Hernandez The Denver Post
The Fort Collins City Council Tuesday night rejected the idea of allowing women to go topless, but unanimously approved on first reading an option to tweak the current law to allow breastfeeding and clarify how it applies to children under 10.
20 Oct 14:55

Where’s Luke? The Star Wars Expanded Universe Might Provide a Hint.

by Jamelle Bouie

The trailer for Star Wars: The Force Awakens is here, and for longtime fans, it’s impossibly exciting. We know a few of the new characters, or at least their names. The young woman with the adorable droid is Rey, played by Daisy Ridley. The figure with the red-hilted lightsaber is Kylo Ren, played by Adam Driver. The X-Wing pilot is Poe Dameron, played by Oscar Isaac. And the young ex-stormtrooper is Finn, played by John Boyega. And of course, there’s Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, and Peter Mayhew as Han Solo, Princess Leia, and Chewbacca, respectively.

But Mark Hamill, Luke Skywalker, is nowhere to be seen. For casual viewers, this is interesting. For fans, it’s a mystery. Why is Luke missing? And what’s the relationship between the new cast and our old heroes? At this point, the only thing we can do is speculate. But we aren’t searching in the dark.

When Disney purchased Lucasfilm and announced a new trilogy, it also closed the door on the Expanded Universe, a long line of comic books, novels, tabletop games, video games, cartoon series—and the occasional movie—that expanded the scope and reach of the Star Wars franchise. It’s impossible to summarize the whole of the EU—I’ve spent my life consuming Star Wars media and there are whole swaths I’ve never touched—but there are a few storylines and characters that define the almost 30-year experiment in collective worldbuilding.

There’s Timothy Zahn’s tale of a resurgent Empire led by Grand Admiral Thrawn; the fun and fast-paced adventures of Rogue Squadron; the ancient history of Knights of the Old Republic. And there’s the tragedy of Jacen and Jaina Solo, twin children of Han and Leia. Both become Jedi. Both fight to defend the galaxy against a terrible invader. But Jacen falls to the Dark Side of the Force, to become Darth Caedus, the grandson of Darth Vader. The story of Skywalker twins who split between darkness and light is potent and painful—and it’s the first thing I thought of when I saw a trailer featuring a mournful Leia and no sign of Luke whatsoever.

The Expanded Universe is finished—erased from canon. But that doesn’t mean its influence is over. In the story treatment for Episode VII—handled by Toy Story 3 scribe Michael Arndt—the focus was reportedly on the next generation of Star Wars heroes, the children of Luke and Han. Arndt was pulled from the film (though he retains a credit) and scripting duties went to J.J. Abrams and Lawrence Kasdan (who co-wrote The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi), but elements seem to remain, and those include characters drawn from the Expanded Universe. Hell, The Force Awakens sounds awfully similar to Legacy of the Force, the story of the Solo/Skywalker twins.

We won’t know the full story until the film is released. But while you wait, you might want to flip through Wookiepedia or pick up a few books from the EU. You might get a few clues for what to expect.

19 Oct 03:01

China’s Growth Slows to 6.9%

by NEIL GOUGH
kurtadb

funny.

The weak result compares with 7 percent growth in the previous two quarters, but was slightly better than the 6.8 percent economists had forecast.









18 Oct 23:30

In Defense of Looting

For most of America’s history, one of the most righteous anti-white supremacist tactics available was looting. As protests in Ferguson continued unabated one…
18 Oct 23:30

Tarantino Unchained - The New Yorker

In early 2010, not long after the release of Quentin Tarantino’s Second World War revenge epic, “Inglourious Basterds,” I began teaching a course on American…
15 Oct 21:30

8 charts that explain the first Democratic debate

Tuesday night's Democratic debate was, in theory, a debate with five candidates running for the party's nomination. But any way you slice the numbers, something else becomes clear: The three-hour affair was entirely a battle of Clinton versus Sanders.

Start by looking at how much each candidate talked. Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders were the only candidates who spoke more than debate moderator Anderson Cooper. Jim Webb didn't even get in half as many words as the CNN anchor.

Dem_debate_graphic1

You can also splice the debate by looking at when candidates spoke. Again, you see Clinton and Sanders dominating. Both dropped memorable lines in the middle of the debate, during an exchange about Clinton's emails. Webb's most memorable moments, however, were when he complained about not being allowed to speak for long enough.

Dem_debate_graphic2

Sanders and Clinton weren't just dominating on the debate stage — they were the candidates viewers wanted to learn about, too. You can see that in search data from Google.

Which candidate was most searched for during the debate?

Dem_debate_graphic3

The saddest candidate of the debate was Lincoln Chafee

Other candidates did have smaller moments of success.

Webb generated a small Google search spike, particularly when he mentioned the enemy soldier he killed during his service as a Marine in the Vietnam War.

Dem_debate_graphic4

Former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley had a surprising victory, too. He, somewhat shockingly, managed to get six times as many new Facebook followers as Clinton during the debate.

New Facebook followers gained during the debate

Dem_debate_graphic5

Then ... there is Lincoln Chafee. Sadly, not a single candidate onstage mentioned Chafee in the course of the debate.

Clinton and Sanders were the only candidates whom any of the five wanted to talk about; each got more name checks during the debate than the other three contenders combined. And, as Vox's Alvin Chang predicted, Chafee got exactly zero mentions from his fellow debaters.

The politician who got the most name checks Tuesday night wasn't Clinton or Sanders — he wasn't even onstage. Democratic candidates mentioned President Obama way more than they referred to one another.

Total mentions in the first Democratic debate

Trump, Carson still dominate from offstage

Even with their social media gains Tuesday night, Democrats still lag far behind leading Republicans in terms of Facebook followers. Ben Carson, for example, has more Facebook fans than Clinton and Sanders combined.

Total Facebook followers, as of October 14

Dem_debate_graphic7


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13 Oct 15:43

Anheuser-Busch InBev and SABMiller Reach Tentative Agreement on Merger

by CHAD BRAY
kurtadb

so apparently coors is run by a joint venture of sabmiller and molson coors. so i’m not sure what this means locally. probably not much. still depressingly monopolistic.

The deal, if completed, would combine the world’s two largest brewers, creating a behemoth that has annual revenue of $64 billion that commands 30 percent of global beer sales.









13 Oct 00:15

Bob Dylan called me a “scurrilous little wretch with a hard-on for comedy”

kurtadb

by dan bern.

In 1991 I was a struggling songwriter, teaching tennis in Encino, just up the 101 from Hollywood where I was living in a little studio apartment a couple blocks from Melrose.

My big claim to fame was having given a few tennis lessons to Wilt Chamberlain, who would come to the park on the occasional afternoon. I taught him a nice slice serve. “I gotta practice now,” he said once. “It’s a little intimidating with the coach right here.” Meaning me.

I wrote a few Bukowski-like poems about teaching Wilt. Mostly crazy fantasies about hanging out with him, cruising down Ventura Blvd. “Hey!” people would shout in the avenues of my mind, “Isn’t that Dan Bern and Wilt Chamberlain?!”

In the evenings I would go and play little music gigs throughout Los Angeles. I had a steady Wednesday night spot at a Chinese joint on Fairfax called Genghis Cohen. I played there so much they put my name on the menu. “The Dan Bern Deal.” Szechuan green beans and Mongolian beef. A great combo, “The Dan Bern Deal.”

The guy who ran the club was named Artie Wayne. He had run A&M’s publishing “for five minutes,” in the industry parlance. Legend was that he’d had a lighted dance floor installed in his office. “It ain’t a hit unless I can dance to it!” he’d crow.

Sometimes Artie would mess with me. “Dan,” he’d pull me aside, two minutes before my set, “Bob Dylan’s coming tonight.”

Artie knew I had a serious Dylan fixation. Maybe it was the harmonica rack I wore around my neck. Maybe it was the topical, talkin’ blues songs I sang. Maybe it was my Jewish midwestern roots and my nasal inflections. Maybe it was all of it. Artie knew how to get under my skin.

I’d first been hit by Dylan, hard, when I was about 16. Up til then I’d mostly listened to the Beatles, and whatever happened to be on the radio. Then one day, this older guy, the husband of a co-worker of my Mom’s, played some Dylan records for me. “Here’s ‘Shelter from the Storm,’” he said. “Here’s ‘Blowing in the Wind.’”

Immediately, my cello was toast. I got my Dad to buy me a guitar the next day.

Even so, I didn’t really “get” what Dylan was on about until one summer day a few weeks later when I was home after my paint crew job at the college. I’d smoked a little dope, and was painting the door of my room. I had put “Blonde on Blonde” on the record player.

Suddenly, as “Leopard Skin Pillbox Hat” began churning, I fell fully into the song. It was like Alice stepping into Wonderland. Every line Dylan sang meant something else! Every line was a sarcastic sneer! For the first time I’d heard something that sounded exactly how I felt.

I started writing my own songs. I never looked back. After college I went to Chicago and started playing seven open mics a week. Soon I started to get my own gigs. The Earl of Old Town. Holstein’s. The No Exit. Legendary Chicago folk clubs.

I printed up posters. “Topical and original folk and blues” they said. With a picture of a curly-haired Midwestern Jewish kid with a guitar and a harmonica rack. I was on my way.

Ten years later, having migrated west, I was teaching tennis in Encino and still struggling. But I’d made a little headway. There was a buzz. The junior scouts from the major record companies, with no power to sign but nice suits and offices and business cards, were coming around.

And I had a column in a little publication called “Song Talk.” My column was called “Verse-Chorus-Bridge.” I didn’t do any real reporting. I just made up characters, mostly based on the publishers and songwriters I was running into, and told fanciful tales of trying to make some headway into the cutthroat world of music and songwriting.

One night I wrote a fake interview with Bob Dylan’s mom. I knew her name, so I used it. The Milli Vanilli scandal was fresh in the news, so I made up a “scandal” about Dylan not having actually written his songs. Turned out, I said, that his mom had written all of his songs. And I “interviewed” his mom. To great comic effect, I thought. They printed it, I had a laugh, and forgot all about it.

Time rolled along. I almost had a record deal with Chameleon, an offshoot of Warner Bros., but it fell through. I got frustrated hanging around L.A. trying to get a record deal. I let go of my apartment, sold my car, bought a van, and started living the road life. For several years I had no home except my van, with a little dog for companionship. Along the way I got a record deal with Work Records, a part of Sony, and at long last started putting out records.

Still, every time I thought I’d put the long shadow of Dylan behind me, it would loom up and engulf me again. Every new record I made, no matter how different it seemed to be from the last, brought on new comparisons to the man from Hibbing. When I’d started out, nothing was so flattering as “You know who you sound like? Bob Dylan!!” But it became increasingly frustrating. If I had a penny for every time I heard some Dylan comparison, I’d be a millionaire.

At some point you see it coming before anyone even says anything. Eventually you make some kind of peace with such things. Mainly because you have to. Maybe you make jokes. “I sort of see Bob Dylan as the Dan Bern of the ’60s,” I said once. I wrote a song, The “Talkin Woody, Bob, Bruce and Dan Blues,” where I break into Bruce Springsteen’s compound and try to serenade him, much as the young Dylan had done for an ailing Woody Guthrie.

I found The Boss asleep in bed
Pillows piled up round his head
I turned on the light, took off my coat
Stuck a thermometer down his throat
Said “Don’t talk….you look pale, Boss….not at all well!”

I said “I wrote you a song called ‘Song to Bruce’
“With a tune I stole from one of yours”
To his platinum records next I pointed,
Said “I just want to be anointed!”
He said, “I ain’t sick…this ain’t a hospital…and how’d you get past the security gate?!!”

In 2007 I got to write songs for the movie “Walk Hard,” a fake biopic about the legendary (and fictional) Dewey Cox, played by John C. Reilly. One of my assignments was to write some faux Dylan songs. My whole life I’d tried to not sound exactly like Dylan. Here I was being asked to actually channel him. I jumped all over that one:

Mailboxes drip like lampposts in the twisted birth canal of the coliseum
Dewey drawls in the first lines of “Royal Jelly,”
Rimjob fairy teapots mask the temper tantrum oh-say-can-you see ‘em
Stuffed cabbage is the darling of the Laundromat
And the sorority mascot sat with the lumberjack
Pressing, passing, spinning, half-synthetic fabrication
Of his time…

There was more. From “Farmer Glickstein:”

From every job now I’ve been fired
From Judas to Joan of Arc inspired
Red clouds on the road required
Three new garbage men just hired
My bloodshot eyes from whiskey tired
The beehive stovetop tractor moonstone sleeping….

And so on.

That was fun. It put a little distance on the whole Dylan thing for me. He was him, and I was me. Even if, whenever I saw a picture of his first album cover, I still thought it was me. But whatever. We all have our stuff.

Sometimes, I didn’t think about Dylan so much anymore. I had a beautiful daughter.   I composed hundreds of little kids-sized songs with her. Put out a couple kids albums. By now I’d made about 25 records. My time in the southwest was evident in my work. Merle Haggard, George Jones—those guys had as much influence on me as Dylan, I figured. I was painting a lot (when I started painting in the late ‘90s, someone gave me a book of Dylan’s paintings. They were good. “Damn, he’s even done that!” I thought). I was writing songs for cartoons. Things were OK.

Then, one night in late September of 2015, I got a note from a friend, Paul Zollo. Paul was the guy who used to write the big interviews for “Song Talk.” He’d interviewed Dylan (for real), which had run in the same issue as my spurious interview with Dylan’s Mom. In 1991.

Apparently, Dylan had seen our Song Talk issue, way back in 1994. With Paul’s interview of him.  And mine, of his mom. Dylan had been in a hotel in Japan. Why he had seen it three years after it ran, while in Japan no less, I have no idea.

But Dylan had been incensed. He wrote a scathing letter, on the stationery of his Japanese hotel. He called me a “Scurrilous Little Wretch with a Hard-On for Comedy.” Somehow the letter, unsent at the time, had surfaced and is being auctioned by Sotheby’s, expecting upwards of $12,000.

He had some choice words for Paul Zollo too. It seems Paul’s main sin was guilt-by-association—his piece had appeared next to mine.

At first I was speechless. After most of a lifetime of songwriting, performing, road-warrioring, recordmaking—always in the shadow of this guy, always somehow measuring myself against this guy—it seemed I had, indeed, pierced the bubble of his consciousness. And this was his judgement! “A scurrilous little wretch!”

I wanted to say, “Bob! It was a joke, Bob!” But I guess he knew that.   After all, I had a “hard-on for comedy.” So, even though he knew it was a joke, he didn’t find it funny. I guess I shouldn’t have used his mom in the piece. Still, it seemed so obviously ludicrous. But still. I guess if you’re Bob Dylan, and people take potshots at you all the time, maybe your patience wears thin. Especially regarding your mom.

I couldn’t believe it. It was like God finally acknowledges your existence, and when he does, he flicks you off his shoulder, like an annoying flea.

What was I to do? Laugh it off? Maybe. But still. This was Bob Dylan!

Well, Bob. I mean, Mr. Dylan. Sir. Your Excellency. Probably you forgot all about it. It’s been over 20 years! For sure, you’ve got other things to think about! But who knows. So here’s the thing. Maybe it was lame, but it wasn’t meant to cause any harm or pain. If it did, even fleetingly, like, for a millionth of a second, I apologize.

If this is the only time our spirits will ever cross paths, well, so be it. I guess that’s life. Kind of ironic, for me. Probably less so for you.

My high school principal once grabbed me in his special death-grip and, leaning low, said, “Some day, you’re gonna get in big trouble for your mouth.”

His words have proven prophetic more than once. Still, even he probably couldn’t have imagined that Bob Dylan would call me “a scurrilous little wretch.”

On the other hand, most people never get a personal quote from Bob Dylan about anything.

That’s something. They can’t take that away from me.

12 Oct 16:11

The Healthiest Typeface

In a New York Times column in July 2012, the filmmaker Errol Morris took a few paragraphs to ponder the likelihood of death by asteroid. “NASA issued reassuring…
09 Oct 13:43

The Light L16 camera

by Jason Kottke
kurtadb

1. didn't someone (same people) have a prototype camera a couple of years ago that you could manipulate focus, etc., in post-processing?
2. this is a terrible video. it's like an ad for the idea of a pocket camera...20 years too late. it doesn't seem to really allude to any of the features of their camera.

The Light L16 camera looks interesting, both literally and figuratively. The L16 comes with 16 different built-in lenses, many of which fire at the same time, creating a super high-quality image at a 52-megapixel resolution.1 Having all those lenses firing at once lets you snap photos and decide on things like focal length and depth of field later.

Using a new approach to folded optics design, the Light L16 Camera packs DSLR quality into a slim and streamlined camera body. It's like having a camera body, zoom, and 3 fast prime lenses right in your pocket. With 16 individual cameras, 10 of them firing simultaneously, the L16 captures the detail of your shot at multiple fixed focal lengths. Then the images are computationally fused to create an incredible high-quality final image with up to 52 megapixel resolution.

Would love to try this out if anyone from Light is reading.

  1. It shoots 4K video too, at 35mm, 70mm, and 150mm.

Tags: photography   video
08 Oct 15:52

Why Neighborhoods Should Not Have the Final Say on Zoning

Mia & Steve Mestdagh/Flickr Why Boulder is taking pre-emptive measures against density, zoning changes, and affordable housing. Bad ones. Come November,…
07 Oct 21:58

Judge Rejects Request by Paul Smith’s College to Change Its Name

by BENJAMIN MUELLER and KRISTIN HUSSEY
kurtadb

weird. so two different benefactors (separated 70 years) feel really strongly about having their full name in the name of the college. The current one wants to rename the school "Joan Weill-Paul Smith’s College." Paul Smith's College isn't a strange enough name?

The college in the Adirondacks, in order to accept a potential $20 million donation, had asked to be released from a naming restriction put in place at the time of its founding.









06 Oct 21:52

Perhaps We Should Retire the Idea That Joe Biden Is "Authentic"

by Kevin Drum
kurtadb

i have a pretty high tolerance for idiotic media memes, but this authentic business is too much for me. stop!!!!

Back in August, Maureen Dowd wrote several hundred words about what a horrible person Hillary Clinton is. No surprise there. She could pretty easily write a million if the Times gave her the space. But then, having obsessed over Hillary's sinister psyche for the thousandth time, she turned to the possibility of white knights jumping into the presidential race to save us all. In particular, there was Joe Biden, who was now reconsidering a run after the death of his son Beau:

When Beau realized he was not going to make it, he asked his father if he had a minute to sit down and talk....“Dad, I know you don’t give a damn about money,” Beau told him, dismissing the idea that his father would take some sort of cushy job after the vice presidency to cash in.

Beau was losing his nouns and the right side of his face was partially paralyzed. But he had a mission: He tried to make his father promise to run, arguing that the White House should not revert to the Clintons and that the country would be better off with Biden values.

It's a touching scene, but also an odd one: Dowd didn't attribute it to anyone. Not even "a friend" or "someone with knowledge of the situation." In Politico today, Edward-Isaac Dovere says there's a reason for that:

According to multiple sources, it was Biden himself who talked to her....It was no coincidence that the preliminary pieces around a prospective campaign started moving right after that column. People read Dowd and started reaching out, those around the vice president would say by way of defensive explanation. He was just answering the phone and listening. But in truth, Biden had effectively placed an ad in The New York Times, asking them to call.

....“Calculation sort of sounds crass, but I guess that’s what it is,” said one person who’s recently spoken to Biden about the prospect of running.

....At the end of August, while friends were still worrying aloud that he was in the worst mental state possible to be making this decision, he invited Elizabeth Warren for an unannounced Saturday lunch at the Naval Observatory. According to sources connected with Warren, he raised Clinton’s scheduled appearance at the House Benghazi Committee hearing at the end of October, even hinting that there might be a running-mate opening for the Massachusetts senator.

Needless to say, I don't have any independent knowledge of whether Dovere is right about this. But it sure sounds plausible, and it's a good illustration of why you should take claims of "authenticity" with a big shaker of salt. Biden is an outgoing guy and gets along well with the press. But that just means he's an outgoing guy who gets along well with the press. Authenticity has nothing to do with it.

It's one thing for people close to a candidate to leak information that makes their man look good—that's so common I'm not sure it even has a name—but for the candidate himself to use his son's death as a way of worming his way into a weekly column written by a woman who detests Hillary Clinton more fanatically than anyone this side of Ken Starr? I'm not quite sure what to call that, but authentic isn't it.

06 Oct 18:43

Arapahoe High School bans "grinding" at homecoming dance

by By Jesse Paul The Denver Post
Arapahoe High School has changed its dance policy to ban students from "grinding" as it kicks off its homecoming week.