Wednesday, October 03, 2007

I'm not too motivated by money these days. What I hope for from my career 5 or 10 years down the road is more about whether what I'll be doing will be interesting. That wasn't true when I started out. Back then, I cared more about how much money I'd be making later. I certainly like money, of course, but it's not something I look forward to the way I used to. Maybe it's because I make more now. Or maybe it's because I'm starting to get a little jaded. Or maybe, just maybe, it's maturity.

( (un)employment | deep thoughts | money )

Saturday, October 06, 2007

Not new, but new to our CD collection.

  • Arcade Fire - "Neon Bible"
  • Mastodon - "Blood Mountain"
  • Sleater-Kinney - "The Woods"
  • Band of Horses - "Everything All of the Time"
  • Regina Spektor - "Begin To Hope"
  • St. Vincent - "Marry Me"
  • Sufjan Stevens - "Michigan"
The last four were for Jessica's birthday.

Uma claims to like Mastodon. For some reason, I don't believe her, but if it means I can listen to what I want instead of the "Animals" song on infinite repeat, I don't really care about her credibility.

( music )

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Is it possible for the broader economy to be more stable while individuals are less stable? It seems counter-intuitive, but it makes sense. Lifetime employment is long dead, and it seems like the social contract of the earlier post-WWII era has been sundered forever 1. And yet, the broader economy is more stable than ever, even with the current dislocations. Economic cycles have been dampened, inflation seemingly tamed. Perhaps it is like how the San Andreas Fault creeps along instead of letting the pressure build up, and then violently releasing it in a massive earthquake. The economy creeps along, lubricated and stabilized by the fortunes and failures of millions of individual economies. Perhaps that will keep the mortgage collapse from becoming an economic collapse. I'm no economist.

1 Of course, it was a historical anomaly to begin with.

( money | deep thoughts | economics )

Friday, October 12, 2007

"The Bionic Woman" is a show that does female role models right. Over the last decade or so we've seen a trend in "girls kicking ass." Initially, it seemed like a good thing, such as with Sarah Michelle Gellar in "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" 1. However, the trend was very quickly hijacked by exploitation. "Charlie's Angels" may have physically kicked ass, but the way they kicked as was so comically over-the-top as to be insulting. They were also too thin in skin-tight, revealing clothing2, and were written (and played by?) silly, emotionally fragile airheads. No thanks. That seemed to be the norm, too, with shows like "Dark Angel" and "Alias." At least "Xena" knew she was a joke. Even the non-ass-kicking roles too often degenerated into neurotic, hen-pecking harridans.

That's what's refreshing about "The Bionic Woman." To be sure, Michelle Ryan is beautiful. C'mon, it's TV. What's notable is that she's more normally-sized, and she dresses like a real person. She is capable of kicking ass, but she's also capable of losing, and badly so. The action is unrealistic 3, but not exploitative. She has cried on the show, but only once (thus far), and that after her boyfriend dies. She's assertive and confident, but not inflexible and definitely not bitchy. She has really serious issues to deal with in her life that are sometimes overwhelming, but she's an adult, and she behaves like one.

It's not just about our fearless heroine, either. Of the seven (thus far) recurring characters, four are women, and I'd say the top three in terms of screen time are all women. There are a lot of shows that do that, of course, but "The Bionic Woman" isn't an estrogen party like "Desperate Housewives" or "Sisters;" it's not aimed at the "for women only" demographic (ghetto?). Katee Sackhoff's villainess is also a positive role in some ways. I mean, ok, sure, she's a wack job, but that's not all she is. She's also more normal physically, and she's never shown any more skin than her face and arms 4. In spite of desperate circumstances, she also doesn't collapse into tears, and while she's kind bitchy, she's really funny while doing it.

I wouldn't call "The Bionic Woman" a great show, but it's certainly a good show. It's good to see a show aimed at both men and women with strong 5 female characters. Hollywood too often pays lip service to that while sneaking in the standard, inaccurate gender stereotypes. What's nice about it is that so much about the characters on the show is normal. Women are police officers and soldiers and scientists. They're smart and dumb, strong and weak, and generally unskanky. Hollywood doesn't usually reflect the real world, but this show does. Though the women are bionic, the rest of it is real.

1 Admittedly, a show I never watched.
2 I am not a Puritan, I just don't like it when they try to pander to me and miss by a mile.
3 She is bionic.
4 Which are muscular, but not scarily so.
5 Physically, emotionally, and psychologically.

( tv )

Monday, October 15, 2007

Kid 2 is a boy.

( us )

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Problem, meet solution. I know, not really, but I think it's apt.

( ideas | energy )

Thursday, October 25, 2007

I have been of the opinion for some time that the effects of the housing bust are going to be worse than have been generally acknowledged. I've seen a steady increase in the doom and gloom from the media, government, and economic analysts as time passes and the reality sinks in. Here's an example.

( economics )

Friday, October 26, 2007

I am not the only one who compulsively selects words in web pages. Nor am I the only one who thought he was the only one. One of us! One of us!

( me )

Monday, October 29, 2007

Can we all agree not to use the word unleashed in reference to things not on leashes?

( words )