Klown and The Imposter

Saw two movies:

Klown

The NYT reviewed it perfectly. Don’t have much to add, except to say that I laughed myself silly. It’s a stupidly funny film loosely patterned after the narrative structure of “Curb Your Enthusiasm” (H/T TLMW), but with a triple dose of inappropriateness. This is not your father’s Dogme 95 Danish movie fare, but a hilarious “Tour de Pussy” that is, in parts, quite sublimely depraved.

The Imposter

This film was shown at Sundance earlier this year but I didn’t get to watch it there. The film is a quasi-documentary (it includes some re-creations) from which one can only walk away thinking truth is stranger than fiction. It tells the story of a 23-year-old French Algerian man in Spain who with dark hair and dark eyes came to pass himself off as a blond-haired, blue-eyed, and younger boy from Texas who’d been missing for nearly four years — fooling international officials and, most incredibly, the boy’s family. Yes, it is that bizarre and incredible. It’s all about deception, self-delusion and the desire to believe.

One of the priceless characters in this movie is a private investigator called Charlie Parker. This guy is the quintessential gumshoe who not only looks the part (see below) but who also has got to be one of the most brilliant figures in the history of documentaries. I don’t want to say he steals the show, because this is about much more than him, but he is the perfect deus ex machina for the last third of the film.

Gripping and thoroughly mesmerizing stuff. Here’s an interesting interview with Charlie Parker (spoiler alert).

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August 2012 Oddments

Sundry items of interest dredged up from the profundity of the interwebs during the month of August:

[July 2012 Oddments]

Economics

  • It is difficult to exaggerate the importance of the global trade in coffee and tea. Among commodities, the $80+ billion international coffee market is sometimes said to trail only that of oil. Coffee is an essential source of revenue for many countries, with Burundi making more than half of its export earnings from the crop. Coffee is a strictly tropical crop that is consumed largely in the temperate belt, which is one reason why it figures so prominently in international trade statistics. Most exporting countries are relatively poor whereas the main importers are relatively wealthy. [link]
  • How do Americans spend their money? And how do budgets change across the income spectrum? Poor, middle class and rich families spend similar shares of their budgets on clothing and shoes, and on food outside the home. But poor families spend a much larger share of their budget on basic necessities such as food at home, utilities and health care. Rich families are able to devote a much bigger chunk of their spending to education, and a much, much bigger share to saving for retirement. [link]

Science and Technology

  • For the 2012 Olympic Games, Speedo has created a “racing system” called Fastskin 3 that combines suit and goggles and cap working in synergy to reduce drag and improve performance. The company called on experts in kinesiology, biomechanics, fluid dynamics and even a sports psychologist, who suggested a blue-gray tinge on goggle lenses to instill a sense of calm and focus. They tried the “Six Thinking Hats” method of brainstorming, a green hat for creative ways to attack a problem, a black one to look at the feasibility of those ideas. They “reverse brainstormed,” picturing how to make a swimmer go as slow as possible with oversized goggles and a suit compressing the body so parts stuck out, creating drag. [link]
  • Extensive research in a wide range of fields shows that many people not only fail to become outstandingly good at what they do, no matter how many years they spend doing it, they frequently don’t even get any better than they were when they started. In field after field, when it came to centrally important skills—stockbrokers recommending stocks, parole officers predicting recidivism, college admissions officials judging applicants—people with lots of experience were no better at their jobs than those with very little experience. (From a comment: “Some people have 3 years experience 10 times.”) [link]
  • ‘Agnotology’, the art of spreading doubt (as pioneered by Big Tobacco), distorts the scepticism of research to obscure the truth. Areas of academic life have been tainted by the practice, but some scholars are fighting back by showing the public how to spot such sleight of hand. [link]
  • Modern Indo-European languages – which include English – originated in Turkey about 9,000 years ago. Researchers used methods developed to study virus epidemics to create family trees of ancient and modern Indo-European tongues to pinpoint where and when the language family first arose. Using phylogenetic analysis, they were able to reconstruct the evolutionary relatedness of these modern and ancient languages – the more words that are cognate, the more similar the languages are and the closer they group on the tree. The trees could also predict when and where the ancestral language originated confirming the Anatolian origin. [link]
  • The behavior of harvester ants as they forage for food mirrors the protocols that control traffic on the Internet. Transmission Control Protocol, or TCP, is an algorithm that manages data congestion on the Internet, and as such was integral in allowing the early web to scale up from a few dozen nodes to the billions in use today. As a source, A, transfers a file to a destination, B, the file is broken into numbered packets. When B receives each packet, it sends an acknowledgment, or an ack, to A, that the packet arrived. This feedback loop allows TCP to run congestion avoidance: If acks return at a slower rate than the data was sent out, that indicates that there is little bandwidth available, and the source throttles data transmission down accordingly. If acks return quickly, the source boosts its transmission speed. The process determines how much bandwidth is available and throttles data transmission accordingly. It turns out that harvester ants behave nearly the same way when searching for food. Researchers found that the rate at which harvester ants – which forage for seeds as individuals – leave the nest to search for food corresponds to food availability. A forager won’t return to the nest until it finds food. If seeds are plentiful, foragers return faster, and more ants leave the nest to forage. If, however, ants begin returning empty handed, the search is slowed, and perhaps called off. [link]
  • Satellites tracking the extent of the sea ice found that it covered about 1.58 million square miles, or less than 30 percent of the Arctic Ocean’s surface. That is only slightly below the previous record low, set in 2007, but with weeks still to go in the summer melting season, it is clear that the record will be beaten by a wide margin. Parts of the Arctic have become like a giant Slushee this time of year. The amount of sea ice in the summer has declined more than 40 percent since satellite tracking began in the late 1970s, a trend that most scientists believe is primarily a consequence of the human release of greenhouse gases. A time will come when the Arctic will be completely free of ice in the summer, perhaps by the middle of the century. By itself, the melting of sea ice does not raise global sea levels, because the floating ice is already displacing its weight in seawater. But the sharp warming that is causing the sea ice to melt also threatens land ice, notably the Greenland ice sheet, which is melting at an increasing rate. Melting land ice does raise sea levels. [link]
  • In one of the Mars rover’s first images of Mount Sharp, scientists have spotted what is called an “unconformity.” The term refers to an evidently missing piece in the geological record, where one layer of sediment does not geologically neatly line up with that above it. Images from orbit had indicated that the lower foothills of Mount Sharp consisted of flat-lying sediments rich in “hydrated” minerals, formed in the presence of water, but that layers above seemed to lack the minerals. Now, the rover’s Mastcam – which provided the new colour panorama image – has taken a picture of the divide, showing sediments apparently deposited at a markedly different angle from those below them. Similar deposits on Earth can arise due to tectonic or volcanic activity. [link]
  • Google reflects what is, over all, a male-driven engineering culture. Mr. Page values product people like himself over business people, they say, and at Google, as at many technology companies, product engineers tend to be men. The number of women working in professional computing jobs dropped 8 percent, to 25 percent of the total, between 2000 and 2011 while the number of men climbed 16 percent, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. [link]
Health
  • Pot-smoking teens may become slower-thinking adults. I am not sure I quite understand the previous sentence but perhaps I’m no longer that quick on the uptake. [link]
Sport
  • Fandom is fundamentally a spiritual arrangement. It is a form of surrender, an agreement to live in a state of powerlessness. The only thing we control as fans is the object and ardor of our devotion. And this unilateral covenant, however absurd, constitutes a vital expression of who we really are. This is why each new indignity hurts so much, yet fortifies our bond. And this experience forms the unconscious bedrock of our identification. Those who disavow their chosen team because of losses disavow themselves. To those who don’t live by the code, this devotion seems deranged. And maybe it is. But lurking within the weeds of extreme fandom is the perpetual seed of hope. [link]
Education
  • Africa is today the fastest growing and second largest mobile phone market in the world. Mobiles are now streamlining education administration and improving communication between schools, teachers and parents. For example, Yoza Cellphone Stories offers downloads of stories and ‘m-novels’. Since 2010, the non-profit organization Worldreader has provided school children in a number of developing countries with access to digital books through donated Kindle e-readers. Recently, it has begun to publish the books via a mobile phone-based e-reader. Dr Maths on MXit, Africa’s largest homegrown mobile social network, has helped 30,000 school-aged children work through maths problems by connecting them with maths tutors for live chat sessions. UNESCO predicts that there will be a shift away from teaching in a classroom-centred paradigm of education to an increased focus on contextual learning, which happens informally throughout the day. There will also be an increased blurring of the boundaries between learning, working and living. Mobiles already support skills development in a range of fields including agriculture and healthcare, and provide paying job opportunities for mobile-based ‘microwork’. [link]
Republican Convention
  • Now that you have thrown everything and the kitchen sink at President Obama and it still hasn’t worked you are panicking. Obama’s approval ratings are still near 50% despite your best efforts to undermine the economy and America’s recovery at every step you can. You tried to hold the American economy hostage to force America into default on its’ debts, debts that YOU rang up under Bush, so you could blame it on Obama and it failed. You’ve used the filibuster more than any other Congress ever, going so far as to vote against providing health care access to 9/11 first responders. You remember 9/11, don’t you, it’s that thing you used to lie us into a war in Iraq, and then when Obama killed Bin Laden and ended the war in Iraq you told people that he hates America and wants the troops to fail. You monsters. You hate Obama with a passion, despite the fact that he is a tax cutting, deficit reducing war President who undermines civil rights and delivers corporate friendly watered down reforms that benefit special interests just like a Republican. You call him a Kenyan. You call him a socialist. [link]
  • The Romney-Ryan speeches were a bizarre exercise in tightroping and hair-splitting. Ryan’s speech weirdly went after the Democrats for a plan to cut Medicare that he himself had rejected for not cutting enough – and then in the same speech went after the Obama vision of society that is a “dull, adventureless journey from one entitlement to the next, a government-planned life, a country where everything is free but us.” Just a lame pair of speeches, overall. They made me miss George Bush. At least the Bush/Cheney/Rove era offered a clear ideological choice – and some pretty passionate, ingeniously-delivered political theater, comparatively. Where’s the blood and guts, the bomb-‘em-till-they’re-crispy war calls? Where are the screw-the-poor tirades, the “you can pry it from my cold dead hand” guns-and-liberty crescendos? [link]
  • Best photo after Clint Eastwood’s rambling “speech”: [link]
  • The most likely outcome of the next election in the US is stalemate. Barak Obama will win reelection and the Republicans will hold on to their majority in the House of Representatives. The House Republicans refusing to budge from their collective commitment to reactionary opposition, highlights the flaws of the American system. The constitutional provisions establishing competing authorities in the US, lauded in every high school civics class as “checks and balances”, assures that the US can only be governed if the different branches of government cooperate. Can American politics be fixed? Two reforms inspired by practices in Europe can make a huge difference. One, the reign of money can be significantly reduced if television time were free to all candidates and paid political advertising were made illegal. Two, America’s state legislatures currently define the borders of electoral districts. If districts were designed, as in Britain, by independent boundary commissions rather than by partisan legislatures, the tendency toward polarization might be significantly reduced. But what is the likelihood of such reforms occurring? Sadly, things look bleak for those who prefer democracy and a more perfect Union. The probable outlook for US politics is continued paralysis and possible catastrophe. And most likely, both. [link]
Miscellaneous
  • Frequent Airline questions. Windows on planes don’t block UVA rays and the dose of UVA at 20,000 feet is a lot bigger dose than one would get on the surface of the Earth. Plane cabin humidity level is generally at 10 to 20 percent, which is lower than the typical indoor humidity level of 30 to 65 percent — so passengers are more likely to become dehydrated. Consuming alcohol in the cabin can further increase dehydration. Alcohol also decreases the ability of the brain to make use of oxygen — an effect that can be magnified by altitude. The Department of Transportation’s Air Travel Consumer Report includes a “mishandled baggage rate, which combines lost, delayed, damaged and stolen bags. In May, there were 2.77 reports per 1,000 passengers. One reason there’s not Wi-Fi on every flight is that for each model of aircraft that a Wi-Fi system is to be used on, the manufacturer must get F.A.A. certification for the system, and the airline must get F.A.A. operational approval. [link]
  • Why do Bedouins wear black in the desert? Because black cools the same way as any other color robe (and perhaps because black doesn’t show dirt.) [link]
  • Researchers apparently have demonstrated that organisations would become more efficient if they promoted people at random, or in one improvement on random promotion, randomly chose the people who will make the promotion decisions. [link]
  • The type of reasoning Sherlock Holmes uses is of a conjectural kind – sometimes called abductive reasoning – that can’t offer certainty or any precise assessment of probability, only the best available account of events. He does this in many of his cases, but it’s not applying this rule that accounts for his astonishing feats. If Holmes can identify an unlikely pattern in events, it’s by using what Watson describes as his “extraordinary genius for minutiae”. As Holmes tells Inspector Lestrade, the plodding Scotland Yard officer: “You know my method. It is founded on the observation of trifles.” [link]
  • A company owned by Ikea is planning a whole new suburb in London’s Stand East. Ikea is already selling pre-fab houses in Sweden and is apparently also getting into the discount/boutique hotel business. [link]
  • This article contains a critique of Facebook’s goal to make every user “totally transparent” by encouraging users to chronicle their entire life on FB, and the increasing monetization of user data which forcing uses to constantly “defend themselves against FB.” The article speculates that it is becoming increasingly harder for users to manage their FB personality and will eventually end up using it only for managing their contacts. [link]
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Jalopy

Got a “classic wreck” 1/24 scale model from John Findra this weekend. The metallic blue 1964 Chevy Impala has lots of funky details like wired and hosed engine, broken glass, removed chrome trim with mounting holes, loosely hinged trunk lid with rusty trunk and spare and all that amazing body rot applied by Classic Wrecks. John is not a big fan of society’s constant strive for perfection and basically goes into the exact opposite direction: by mucking things up. The Impala has been rusted, dissembled for parts, and painted in grime and dirt to convey that charming backwoods sitting-in-the-neighbor’s-yard-forever look.

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Excess Profits League (EPL)

Seems like the EPL just ended and here it is already starting all over again. I got back into the swing of things watching the season opener between Arsenal and Sunderland with the always engaging, though not always flawless, pair of Ian Darke and Steve McManaman on ESPN.  Their best exchange was a hilarious dialogue about McClean’s misspelled name on his jersey. El Macca was “gobsmacked” when a blazing hot female supporter appeared on screen shortly before the start of the second half.

No more RVP but several new faces on the Gunners’ team: Podolski, Carzola, Giroud. None of them convincing. The Black Cats with their new jerseys featuring “Invest in Africa” sponsorship. Africa’s largest independent oil company, Tullow Oil, is evidently the founding partner in this initiative. Question is, who’s wearing Invest in Sunderland jerseys?

Lovely sunny and hot afternoon at the Emirates in North London. Darke must have mentioned the obvious at least four times, #thisaintradio. Good noise but a scoreless tie. Familiar feeling of frustration for Arsenal.

On Sunday, City was on the edge of defeat against newly promoted Southampton, but sadly battled back to eke out a 3:2 win in what was a pretty spirited campaign by both teams. Southampton made City look quite ordinary for significant portions of the game. Hope this is a sign for things to come.

Can’t wait for Monday, the start of Man U’s Sweet Revenge Tour.

Update: Well, Man U’s Sweet Revenge Tour started on a sour note with a 1:0 defeat to Everton. The Red Devils got sucker punched on a header from Fellaini from a corner. RVP played for about 20 minutes but didn’t really get into the game. Kagawa showed great form, nice spacing, good pace, fit the Man U system perfectly. But hate to admit it, Everton had more chances, played with more passion, and deserved to win. Three points down from the lead. Not an abyss, but a hole.

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Corazón y Hueso

Not done listening. Too good.

Daniel Melingo is like listening to Tom Waits, Paolo Conte or Nick Cave singing tango. Like a modern Roberto Goyeneche.

On Corazón y Hueso he runs the gamut from a surreal song about an orchestra of animals in which he is joined by a children’s choir, to a sarcastic waltz (La novia), to a milonga triste (Ritos en la sombra), to a gorgeous rendition of Federico García Lorca’s poem (El paso de la siguiriya), to borderline free jazz arrangements (Ritos en la sombra, Lucio el anarquista).

With his gruff voice, Melingo doesn’t offer a sanitized version of tango, but gives it raw and earthy, straight from the streets and full of blues (i.e. canyengue), and mixes tango with other styles and instruments like the clarinet, bass, harmonica, bagpipes, guitarras sucias etc. The CD contains all the lyrics in Spanish and brief summaries, but not the entire songs, in French and English. Melingo’s lunfardo dialect is strong and occasionally hard for me to understand and there’s enough slang in the lyrics to throw me off here and there but, thanks to the included extensive glosario lunfardo, the gist is pretty clear.

The themes on this album include a(n):

  • lament to a woman who left
  • prisoner suffering homosexual abuse
  • tattoo that serves as a reminder of a prison term
  • sad ending on the lawless streets of Buenos Aires
  • poet tormented by a song named Negrito
  • ode to Buenos Aires slang
  • poet turning his own verses into people and talking to them
  • clean, hard-working anarchist

Source: Federico Garcia Lorca, Poem of the Deep Song (Spanish Edition)

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Voodoo Mystery

Here’s a news story about a mystery story that became mystery and then turned into a messy story.

Apparently, the German publishing house S. Fischer will shortly release a book called “Der Sturm” (The Storm) by Per Johansson written in the style of popular Scandinavian crime fiction. The book revolves around the particularly bestial murder of a German journalist and editor in chief of a major newspaper.

What makes this particular publication so intriguing is that a German daily, Die Welt, did some in-depth sleuthing and found that the apparent author Per Johansson does not really exist. This despite the fact that the book’s cover features a photo of the ‘author’ and describes him as living in Berlin and working as a web designer. It also lists the name of a woman who ostensibly translated the book from Swedish to German. Until recently, the S. Fisher publishing house even carried a fictitious bio for Per Johansson on its web site. That bio has since been replaced but is still preserved in the publisher’s 2012 Autumn “Rights Guide” along with blurbs from Håkan Nesser and Orhan Pamuk of all people. (see screenshot below). The publisher of the book has since conceded that the author is indeed a pseudonym for an “author duo.”

Even stranger still, Die Welt found a number of similarities between the murder victim in the book and Frank Schirrmacher, an influential author, literary critic and co-publisher of one of the most widely read German newspapers, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ), where he is responsible for the culture, science and other sections.

Die Welt also suspected that the author of the book is in fact Thomas Steinfeld, the culture editor of the FAZ’s rival Süddeutsche Zeitung, who also happens to be a former employee of Schirrmacher.

Steinfeld, in the meantime, has released a statement in which he outs himself as one the book’s co-authors yet insists that the book is not a roman à clef and that any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental in this fictional account. Schirrmacher himself would only say that he “does not read Swedish mystery novels.”

However, there are a number of media reports outlining the various similarities that seem anything but coincidental. These include that the victim wears an almost homonymous brand of shoes, has blond, curly hair, is about 50 years old, and has published articles on networks, robots and gene technology as well as book about the future and capitalism. All this, evidently matches characteristics of Frank Schirrmacher.

There are many layers of intrigue in all this about the German cultural scene, where Schirrmacher is a controversial and occasionally divisive figure. It’s not clear if this strange case of voodoo literature is a case of envy and revenge or a sophisticated marketing ploy or a bit of both. Needless to say, the German media is currently having a field day with this juicy story.

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The Last Detective

Done reading.

By Peter Lovesey. Published 20 years ago. Start of the Peter Diamond series (not the economist). Some good literary elements, varying points of view, well-written dialogue, interesting characters (including the singularly murderable victim), and nice sense of place in rooting the story in Bath. A few interesting allusions to Jane Austin, a one-time resident of the city. There’s a recurring luddite theme eschewing new forensic technologies in favor of old-fashioned gum shoe work – hence the title – which feels a bit out-dated by now.

The narrative structure and plot development befitting a first-time author was a bit surprising given that Lovesey had been an already experienced mystery writer by the time of writing this book. There’s a strange break in the narrative flow about two thirds through when the plot speeds up significantly after a major dispute. While there was some tension brewing prior to that, the event still struck me as somewhat artificial and provided unnecessary ‘botheration’ (a word used in the book). The resolution of the case also stretched plausibility.

All in all, a quite reasonable procedural, never really dull, but also not exactly rousing. In sections, it was a bit long-winded and I found myself a few times, to use an expression from the book, “stuck there like a lupin waiting for a bee.”

I did like some of the Britishcisms that provided intermittent entertainment.

Weir in the River Avon near Bath’s picturesque Pulteney Bridge.
Its perilous current plays a role in the book.

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And Everything Is Going Fine

I finally saw the Spaulding Gray documentary I had mentioned before. Soderbergh does a great job in slicing and dicing archival footage of Gray’s performances for what essentially amounts to a “new” monologue about his life as a whole. The documentary stays pure Gray, no other new footage (e.g. interviews) is used.

But what tangled mess Gray’s psyche was! I saw movies of a few of his monologues years ago and, yes, they were twisted and autobiographical and wildly imaginative, but I had no idea just how autobiographical they actually were. Gray’s childhood may almost rival Augusten Burroughs’.

As he says in the documentary, his basic approach to the monologues was “poetic journalism,” i.e. reality filtered through his imagination. His public solo performances turned into swinging and flying psychopathological trapeze acts without safety nets. They were cathartic events in which he tried to come to grips with the psychological issues that plagued him.

Three things really stayed with me from the documentary: one, the incredible craftsmanship that went into the monologue performances. What comes across as him just showing up on stage and telling stories off-the-cuff, were instead very carefully developed and structured stories. Two, the frail looking images of Gray at the end of his life after having suffered severe hip and brain injuries from a car accident in Ireland. He never was the same again. In one shot he calls himself, when he was at his most helpless and needed constant care, a “half-dead spectator.” The third thing is just such a sad leitmotif in his life. The relationship, or lack thereof, he had with his mostly uncaring and unbalanced, if not psychotic, mother who also committed suicide clearly traumatized him. The documentary shows that he longed for some form of “mothering” for the rest of his life. At some point, he mentions that wherever he is, he always tries to ground himself by his physical location to the sea. “The sea,” he says, “is the mother.” Of course, given his apparent suicide by ‘sliding’ into the East River, this turned out be oddly ironic and prophetic. However, in the movie there is no reference of the suicide. Instead it ends with a series of photos of Gray as a young boy – the final photo is of him in the arms of his mother.

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Going Places

Dahon in tow …

© 2012 Proper Manky

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Female Curiosity

As previously mentioned here, I had been looking forward to the Mars landing of the Curiosity rover and managed to watch it live on CNN.com last night.

Once the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) entered the Martian atmosphere it was exciting to monitor the seven-minute plunge to the surface of the planet along with scientists at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

I knew the rover had its own twitter account, but I didn’t know that Curiosity is female. The NASA officials kept referring to the rover with the 3rd person singular female pronoun; e.g. “She had a perfect landing.” Maybe that’s because of the teenage girl who won the naming contest for the rover or the three women who communicate on behalf of the rover via @MarsCuriosity? Regardless, a nice touch and a small nod to improving stereotypes, biases and other cultural beliefs about women in science and technology.

The slideshow contains some screenshots I took that show:

  • NASA scientists monitoring the MSL’s landing
  • MSL entering the Martian atmosphere protected by a heat shield; its progress is shown by the white trail above the horizon line
  • supersonic parachute deploying to slow down the spacecraft
  • MSL rapidly losing speed
  • Rocket-powered sky-crane emerging
  • Sky Crane lowering rover to ground via steel cables
  • Images transmitted by rover shortly after landing
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As a side note, Intel’s wholly-owned Wind River subsidiary wrote the software that guided the U.S. space agency’s Mars Science Laboratory to its bulls-eye landing on Mars. Wind River’s VxWorks provides the core operating system of the spacecraft’s control system.

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Unclubbable

Quotes from a writer remembering Gore Vidal in the WaPo:

Consider his lacerating self-assessment: “I’m exactly as I appear,” he once said. “Beneath my cold exterior, once you break the ice, you find cold water.”

At restaurants, Vidal always picked up the bill, explaining that this was to remind him that he wasn’t wealthy: “Rich people never pay,” he said.

Having fallen out of favor with the Kennedys, having figured on Nixon’s enemies list and now having been declared persona non grata by the Reagans, Vidal said he had scored a hat trick. But clearly he was annoyed that he was always, as the British say, “unclubbable.”

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Octopus

Done reading. (But really shouldn’t have!)

Matt Taibbi recently recommended this book written by Guy Lawson, a fellow Rolling Stone contributor.

Octopus is an incredible dark comedy with one of the craziest true-life ironic twists you can possibly imagine.

That sounded intriguing enough. Taibbi likes the way Lawson describes the deeply corrupt netherworld of endless, relentless insider trading. This environment apparently warped the mind of the hedge fund manager and Ponzi schemer whose downfall the book covers – to the point where he could be “perhaps the biggest dupe in the history of con artistry.”

Kirkus called the book:

An eye-opening window onto Wall Street’s destructive culture of unchecked hubris and a harrowing thrill ride into the unraveling mind of a desperate operator.

Ok. Well, it turns out, all of the above is pretty accurate. The book is indeed a portrait of a “society populated with the peculiar mix of the devious, the dangerous, and the deluded.” The stories of soul-sucking deceit in this book do make Tom Wolfe’s Bonfire of the Vanities, by comparison, seem pretty understated and outright believable.

Octopus is about Sam Israel, a member of a wealthy Louisiana family, who bilked sophisticated investors out of a reported $450-million. Israel’s con game went on for years but he eventually grew increasingly desperate to recoup years of losses and by 2005 his jig was up. How the bullshitter was bullshitted is a long and unfortunately tedious story.

Lawson turns Israel into such easy prey that it’s hard to fathom anyone ever took this nut job seriously. The author goes to great pains to explain how a con man like Israel could be beaten at his own game and even laboriously outlines the whole choreography of the con: telling the tale, putting the mark on the send, taking off the touch, the blow-off, putting in the fix. Yet, the cons and conspiracy theories Israel fell for are too transparently idiotic and have such crazy-ass byzantine complexity (at least as told in this book) to take much of the book’s cautionary tale about Wall Street as a gigantic criminal operation seriously. In that sense, the book sadly undermines its own cause.

However, with scenes like the one in the bizarre mansion Israel rented from Donald Trump, or in the hedge fund’s HQ in a Connecticut boathouse, or on the bridge from which Israel attempted a fake suicide, Taibbi will probably be proven right: someone soon is going to make Octopus into a movie. My money is on Paul Giamatti as Sam Israel.

As a book, though, this is not much more than an inflated, medicore magazine article.

Quotes:

  • “He mastered the most American of all performing arts: self-invention.”
  • “You’re not going to learn how to shave by practicing on my beard.”
  • “Lying naked in his bed in the Trump house watching SpongeBob SquarePants, Sam Israel confided to one of Bayou’s employees that he was going through a liquidity crisis” (#understatementofthedecade)

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West Coast Blues

Done reading.

The French cartoonist Jacques Tardi’s excellent graphic novel adaptation of Jean-Patrick Manchette’s crime thriller beautifully captures the noir aesthetic of the book. Given the title, it also comes with several excellent cool jazz references: Bob Brookmeyer (Truckin’!), Tal Farlow, John Lewis, Gerry Mulligan, Chico Hamilton, Shelly Manne etc. Even though west coast jazz is often associated with sun and surf, the relaxed tempos and lighter tone of some of the blues referenced here fits the mood of noir fiction perfectly. Sort of like Miles Davis’ soundtrack for Elevator to the Gallows.

Below is the opening page which poignantly illustrates some of the similarities between comics and film. The sequence of frames on this page is straight out of film school: long shot to establish the scene, medium shot, close-up – and voilà, we’re drawn into the story.

The second page continues to illustrate the cinematographic quality and cool, noir mood. Plus some fine pince sans rire humor.

Below is a frame from a sequence where the main character is assaulted by two thugs while swimming in the ocean. This is how he ends up defending himself. The whole sequence is brilliantly drawn. I couldn’t describe it much better than was done here.

A graphic brain splattering scene:

There’s some quirky, almost existentialist humor in the book. Here’s my favorite panel, almost an example of flash fiction:

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Is Life Worth Living?

Well, it depends on the liver …

I was reminded of this old homonymic quip while reading the smart opening paragraph in a book review for Artur Domosławksi’s “Ryszard Kapuściński: A Life:”

Journalists are the livers of society, organs that break down the myriad poisons of war, revolution, and labyrinthine legal complexity for a body politic. They are also the livers in another sense—their professional function is to go out and live, to experience, explain, bear witness, and provide insight.

I’ve long been a fan of Kapuściński, warts and all. And apparently Domosławski corroborates what many reviewers and critics have noted since his death—that his books are riddled with historical mistakes, distortions, exaggerations, lies, and secondhand stories presented as facts.

But as I wrote before, I still tend to think of RK as a brilliant, flawed and slightly nutty, if not tragic, character, who did his thing in however odd ways, compromised himself where he thought he needed in order to maximize his opportunities for pretty wild adventures (e.g. be permitted to travel). Reading about those adventures, however fictitious, has always given me a special thrill.

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