Archive for August, 2009

The Twentieth Century

August 31, 2009

Sometimes…
the solution…
is worse than
the problem…
Let’s stay together!

–”The Twentieth Century“, Pet Shop Boys

Book report: “Outliers” by Malcolm Gladwell

August 30, 2009

(This is an emotional one, folks.  Prepare to see a man be weak in public.  Writing this has been a medium-class revelation, though, for which I am very appreciative.)

MAN let’s hear it for books.  If I ever cross paths with that afro-headed little genius Malcolm Gladwell I’ll give him a big hug.

For me, anyway, it’s a life-changing experience when someone who’s never met me explains me to me in a way that:

  1. makes so much sense,
  2. makes sense of much of my life story, and
  3. in a way that I would never have figured out for myself.

So get this.  Culturally, I’m lower class.

This makes perfect sense, now that I think about it for the first time ever, because Dad’s dad made furniture (and I mean, like, did the actual making) in a factory and Mom’s parents were from the sticks of Illinois, gathering cardboard boxes into a Model T for resale, getting drunk and stuff like that.

Cut-and-pasted below is the part that made me cry.

It’s about Chris Langan, The World’s Smartest Man, who has an IQ of 195 and of whom no one has ever heard because he grew up fending for himself in an abusive home and never learned how… how to get what he wanted (or that such getting was even on the table) from Other People (which I can identify with to the point of pain).  The first sentence refers to how he got kicked out of college for trying to move his classes from morning to afternoon.  (Huh?  Exactly.)

It’s also about Robert Oppenheimer, not quite as smart as Langan but who also grew up in Manhattan’s smartest and richest neighborhood and learned about other people from his Dad, a rising mogul in the garment business (as a great crop of super-successful New York Jews were in that decade).  Robert suffered depression in college at Oxford, freaked out one day, and committed attempted murder by poisoning his personal tutor… and then somehow negotiated with The Committe and walked out with academic probation.

outliers1outliers2outliers3outliers4outliers5

And there it is.  Busted.  Busted busted busted.

There’s more to every human story, of course, but Malcolm’s really got me pegged here.  Other than playing catch and frisbee with Dad (which taught me about physics and is an experience I’ll always remember), and also some really great “smart camps” in the summertime which were never my idea but still great, my day-to-day childhood was completely hands-off.  We weren’t broke, dinner was always on the table, I always had clean clothes and the roof never leaked, but I never really got the idea that Mom or Dad found me interesting.  It was just me, my books, the television and my big ideas.  ’And this subtle and constant pressure to not make a mess or waste money, to keep my head down and never ever f#$% up and do what stupid/poor people do and become one of them.

Contrast this with how I suddenly imagine/understand, for instance, the lives of many of my college classmates, whom I suddenly find more fascinating than the day I met them:

There’s X, the grandson of a brilliant and well-published academic who had surely lived out in the world 24-7, learning, negotiating, exploring and collaborating with all kinds of people to advocate and exemplify what he thought was right.  X had great fun in college, got effortlessly laid like some kind of god and just seemed, to me, to walk around with this suit of invisible armor that he knew would protect him from all the disappointment and rejection in the world.  X drove me absolutely f@#$#ing crazy with indignation because… because dammit, no one had ever given him permission to feel so at home in the world and ask it for what he wanted.

And then there’s Y, whom I’ve had a lot of contact with, almost daily for some time, but from whom I am now somewhat estranged.  At Y’s house his mother and father were constantly querying him and his sister about their lives, what they wanted and how they might be able to help.  Writing letters, scheduling meetings and advocating on their behalf.  Y would drive me crazy as well for… for acting out of the confidence that what was good for him (and sometimes him alone) was important and obviously required settling.  Who does he think he is?  How dare he?

“How dare he?”  ”Who gave him permission?”

I realize now that I’ve thought that, indignantly but also enviously, about a lot of people, including people I’ve never met in person.  Off-the-cuff examples:

  • Jim Henson making the Muppets: That’s great, but wow, how did he know that he could get away with it?
  • The Wright Brothers making an airplane: That’s great!  But man, how in the world could they have sunk so much time and money into that up-to-then-unsolvable problem and… and gotten away with it?  And know that anyone would still love them?  Who gave them permission?
  • Saul Griffith getting all those projects together and making all those bomb-ass inventions, none of which has ever made a goddamned dime.  How dare he?  How in the flying hell do other people want to give him their money so that he can do those things?  How on earth does that happen?

Entitlement, that’s how.  They’d learned entitlement and I haven’t… not yet anyway.  You’re right, Malcolm, you’re right you’re right you’re right.

—————–

I can see this in the music that speaks to me most intimately:

Dad I wonder if I ever let  you down?
If you’re ashamed how I turned out?
Then he lowered his voice and he raised his brow:
That’s something to be proud of!
That’s a life you can hang your hat on.
You don’t need to make a million.
Just be thankful to be working.
When you’re doing what you’re able.
Putting food there on the table.
And providing for the family you love.
That’s something to be proud of!

–Mongtomery Gentry, “Something to Be Proud Of

(oh) Just believe in me baby and I’ll take you away!
From out of this darkness
And into the day!
From these rivers of headlights
These rivers of rain
From the anger that lives on the streets with these names.
I’ve run every red light on memory lane.
I’ve seen desperation explode into flame!
And I don’t want to see it again!

–Dire Straits, “Telegraph Road

————————

This also makes me think about me and my church.  We wear decent clothes and drive late-model Subarus and Honda Elements, but we’re a lower-class bunch, I suspect, from the pastors on down.  We respond so emotionally and powerfully to this message that:

  • we are broken from birth and deserve nothing but misery, sin and death,
  • we are loved completely by the a creator who wants us exactly as we are and Has A Plan For Us, and that
  • said creator is and has always been in complete control of absolutely everything and warns us of the super-sin “Pride” which is, in essence, a failure to recognize his control and attempt to assume it for one’s self.  We are helpless, but we have a just and perfect master.

Oh to grace how great a debtor
Daily I’m constrained to be.
Let thy goodness, like a fetter
["fetter" = a leg shackle]
Bind my wandering heart to Thee.
Prone to wander, Lord I feel it.
Prone to leave the God I love.
Here’s my heart, oh take and seal it.
Seal it for Thy courts above.
Come my Lord, no longer tarry.
Take my ransomed soul away!
Send thine angels now to carry
Me to realms of endless day.
–Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing

This is lower class rank-and-file material for sure, now that I look at it this way.  Hm.

—————————–

I guess one of the drawbacks to blogging is that one can just publish right away instead of having to re-think and edit N times.  I hope I’ve made some sense here and at least gotten you interested in book’s other 270 pages.

This is an important and meaningful book, and it’s shown me how I need to raise myself now.  It points across the horizon to a land that’s new, scary, dream-fulfilling… and apparently actually there.  At least for some people.  Go figure.

Thank you, Malcolm.  Thank you.

A Muppets Anthology part 2: The La Choy Dragon

August 27, 2009

Here’s one of the ads featured in the World of Jim Henson exhibit at the EMP museum two weeks ago.  It clearly reveals the technical lineage of Big Bird on Sesame Street (the key to which was a small television inside the suit which allowed the internal puppeteer to see what he was doing):

The La Choy dragon, late 1960′s.  That’s not my Mom, but she could have pulled it off.

But it gets better.  Enjoy the fake “making of” reel that Henson and company put together, the audience for which must have been other advertising people:

And here’s where it gets even better: That very chow mien (fortified with leftover chicken and/or turkey meat) and those very noodles were enjoyed greatly by your truly as a youngster in the late 1970′s and early 1980′s.

Connections connections.

Shoot, I’m gonna have some of that this weekend.

Origin and Development of Cookie Monster

August 21, 2009

It was my great pleasure to visit the World of Jim Henson exhibit at the nearby Science Fiction Museum in Seattle Washington last Sunday.

I keep forgetting how much I love Jim’s work and what it means to me.  I associate it with hilarity and joy and freedom in this very real way, to the point that I was once advised to be a Muppet when I grew up.

But of course Mr. Henson didn’t just start doing Muppets right out of school or anything.  (No one was hiring for Muppets.)   He had been doing graphic design and putting on plays and performances since he was a youngster, and this work led to characters that came to be what we call Muppets.

Today I’l focus on the Cookie Monster (or “koo-koo-ma”, as I called him when a toddler), forever my favorite Muppet.  Much like Jim’s work in general, Cookie Monster is wholesome, passionate, fearless, mostly uncomplicated and has no sense of shame whatsoever. He is everything that we drift away from being ourselves as we age… unless we’re a little lucky and/or Super Self Aware.

Jim had been doing these funky “beat” puppet shows since college, and after he graduated in 1958 was living in Washington DC and trying to make a few bucks with them to support his young family.

He who became Cookie Monster was one of three monsters that Jim invented for some TV commercials for a trio of snack crackers called Wheels, Crowns and Flutes and made by the same company.  He who became Cookie Monster was the “Wheel Stealer,” a creature that would sneak into people’s houses and eat their Wheels.  Alas, those commercials were never broadcast so now they’re long gone.

But there Jim was, sitting there with this hilarious googly-eyed monster puppet that loved to eat everything.  Obviously in hindsight, something was going to happen.  He was re-cast for a skit that became known as “The IBM Monster.”

(Notice how different he looks with teeth.  I also want to point out how this skit was not conceived for children, but late night adult variety television, not unlike the Late Show with Johnny Carson or Jay Leno.  Also notice that holy crap this is funny):

[I believe that's Jim Henson's voice that we hear from both the monster and the computer, and that neither are The Great Frank Oz, who may not have yet met Jim and started working with him.  Some research can clear this up.]

Cookie-Monster-to-be found another snack food to fall rapturously in love with, this time publicly: Frito-Lay’s Munchos potato crisps, I suspect an early cousin to today’s Pringles.  Note the now-missing teeth.

Lordy I just can’t stop cracking up from these:

[There's just something about this fluid and unpredictable transition from wild slapstick to careful precision that just cracks me up.  Man.]

(I mean sure, he was shilling potato chips.  So what.  But I love how he did it with such style and humor, and on such a low budget, that I love these works regardless.  They transcend the fact that they’re advertising, but also got to exploit that market for economic support.  Downright alchemy; Lead into gold, water into wine.)

Frito-Lay wanted to re-up the contract, but by that time (1968?  1969?) Jim had been tapped to help with a new inner-city educational show Sesame Street (bankrolled by the Nixon administration no less) and went to work foiling poor Kermit.

At the time of these skits, he didn’t even have the name Cookie Monster yet because he hadn’t yet performed “C is for Cookie”:

“The moon sometimes looks like a C, but you can’t eat that.” –Cookie Monster

And there you have it.  Cookie Monster.  Wherefor art thou Cookie Monster.

Hm.  I don’t know how to wrap this up.

You know what?  I just realized that I thought that I had come up with “AAAAMMN-NAM-NAM-NAM” when eating something delicious.  No!  That was Cookie Monster!

What else?

Offshore LNG receiving

August 18, 2009

Well look at that.  Some rich yodels thought they could receive LNG (liquified natural gas) in Chesapeake Bay, got shot down by people freaking out about safety, and have come back with a proposal that certainly strikes me as much more sensible.

Idea: Receiving and gasifying LNG from a floating platform to keep people on shore out of blast radius

Idea: Receiving and gasifying LNG from a floating platform N miles from shore to keep land-dwelling humans out of a terrorist's/accident's blast radius

So how about that.

I’ve heard of water desalination schemes working the same way, so that the only fixed and non-repo’able asset is the tube going out to the plant.  The Russians have been pumping such a form factor for floating nuclear power plants for some time as well.

I do think it’s kinda spooky, though, how essential utilities are creeping out into privately-owned floating offshore assets that can be yanked (perhaps not legally, but logistically) at a moment’s notice.  Not that it isn’t fair, just tenuous.  Mega-economies on the installment plan.

Writing for people who don’t know English well.

August 7, 2009

Heya guys,

So my new job at Sea Bird Electronics is really great as jobs go. I’m very pleased.

The hardest part, so far, is answering technical questions from people all over the world who don’t know English very well. They’re not stupid, but they don’t speak my language so hot.

Even harder is trying to point things out that they SHOULD be asking, but aren’t. Yeah.

So I’s just wondering if anyone here has some tips, or maybe some books or references or examples, about how to do this well.

Eh?

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