Archive for the 'News' Category

A new beginning

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009 by ptm

So we’ve been meaning to reboot this site (which has, as you might be aware, been dormant for a couple of months) since the start of the new year. Well, what better time to do that than on this historic day? None…none better time.

That being said, I was up early on the west coast to watch the inauguration events unfold. And I kept a little live diary of it. It’s after the fold. I will come back and edit it later, but as of this posting (9:46am PST) I’m just putting up what came out in real time. Welcome back, SP readers.

Not SP readers.
(Reuters/Brian Snyder)

(more…)

Two images for the past week

Sunday, November 9th, 2008 by ptm

Obama

Biden

I don’t know if anything else needs to be said. Congratulations, America.

Real simple: Go Vote

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008 by ptm

OK, yeah, again, it’s been a while. The Red Sox didn’t make it happen, which is oddly fine. (What a strange world we live in.) Lisa came out for a very fun visit to L.A. School has been progressing nicely, with a lot of work mixed in with a bit of fun.

But there’s no time for all that now. No, now it’s time to do the democracy thing. And, yeah, I know what you’re thinking: this election isn’t really that big a deal. I mean, our secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin isn’t even on the ballot this year. If you can’t vote for him, then why even bother showing up?

I hear you. And the answer, of course, is simple: you have to go and vote so you can make sure weed and gayness stay illegal. Isn’t that what’s important?

Now…not enough time has been spent in this space talking about this election. I can’t explain why. So much has happened, almost all of it worth commenting on. What can I say? There’s no excuse. We dropped the ball. Hopefully you’ll forgive us.

I’ve wanted to write more in the past week or two, but frankly, I’ve been nervous. I don’t like being in the position where the side I’m pulling for has a comfortable lead. Right now, I feel the same way I did during game 4 against St. Louis in ‘04: the score is 3-0 in the bottom of the ninth, two outs, the Sox have a three games to none lead in the Series, and I can think of is, “there’s a runner on base; if Renteria gets a hit, the next guy can hit a homer to tie it, and we could have this all swept out from under us.” I don’t know if I’m a pessimist with a thin shell of optimism, or the other way around. Either way, I get scared when I’m excited, and I’m excited. And scared.

Anyway, the takeaway message is this: even if you can’t vote for William Galvin, you should still get out there and vote. I already have, because I cheated and voted early via absentee ballot. I’m hoping that this will be the first time since 1996 that my Presidential vote in either a primary or general election has gone to the eventual winner. I’m also going to try to vote again tomorrow under the name Mickey Mouse…but that’s only if I can follow the complicated instructions my new ACORN friends have given me.

I’m rambling. Go vote. Vote for change. Don’t let this all get swept out from under us. Can we do this?

…I think you know the answer.

Vote For Change: find your polling location

Since we haven’t talked about her yet…

Thursday, September 18th, 2008 by ptm

Two quick Palin-related things:

1. boston.com: Hackers break into Sarah Palin’s e-mail account

It wasn’t immediately clear how hackers broke into Palin’s Yahoo! account … A hacker also might have sent a forged e-mail to her account tricking her into revealing her own password.

I am having a love affair with the idea that Sarah Palin fell for a phishing scam, and now her personal emails are circulating the internet. “@Hello, S. Palin – you may have already won a prize!!!@”

2. This was the main story/image and sub-story on CNN.com just now:

Image Hosting

I’m assuming no one asked, “Why are you and your staff refusing to comply with a legal court order?” Although, sadly, that might not have really stumped her, since “I’m above the law” seems to be a valid answer for her.

Two examples of loved ones being too supportive

Thursday, March 13th, 2008 by ptm

#1. boston.com: Woman’s odyssey to New York lands her at center of scandal

In case you haven’t been paying attention, the cast of characters go like this: soon-to-be-former-Governor Eliot Spitzer’s political career has crumbled around him because it was revealed that he utilized the services of a high-class escort service. Which people aren’t very down with, even though he was frugal enough to only go for the five diamond girls instead of the seven diamond ones (which cost a few grand more…fiscal responsibility, people!). As the media sharks have circled the story, they’ve honed in on the girl, who works under the name Kristen but lives under the name Ashley Alexandra Dupre. In digging around to find out more about her story (and as an excuse to run blurry MySpace photos of her while moralists and apologists alike secretly think about what she must look like naked and the sort of things she’s able to do to be worth $1,000 an hour), we’ve also been introduced to Carolyn Capalbo, the girl’s mother. While the mom is “shell-shocked” that her daughter is a whore, she still has a strong sense of belief in her girl:

“She is a very bright girl who can handle someone like the governor,” Capalbo said in a telephone interview yesterday.

Wow. It’s nice that you want to stand by and support your daughter, and stand up for her intelligence. But…you could maybe choose your words better. It’s bad enough your mom knows that you have handled a governor – does she have to talk about it to the wire services? Thanks, mom.

Side comment I: how humiliating must it be to be the wife of the famous politician who cheated on you and then had to hold a press conference admitting it? (Boston.com has a nice little photo gallery here.) They always have to stand there, trying to look supportive but not overly forgiving…and in the end, they just look shell-shocked with simmering rage. Sometimes it works out for you (like you can end up being a major-favorite candidate for president)…most of the time, though, it probably just sucks. If I was ever the politician in that situation, I’m pretty sure I’d be standing up there alone. “Uh, yeah, she couldn’t make it – she’s currently destroying all of my possessions and preparing what best way to mutilate my genitals when I get back home.”

Side comment II: did you ever think the day would come when the prestigious New York Times would be giving a photo credit to MySpace? Times are strange.

#2. CNN.com: Boyfriend: Phobia caused woman’s 2-year bathroom stay

The details of this story speak for themselves. And they say things like:

“She is an adult; she made her own decision,” said her boyfriend, Kory McFarren. “I should have gotten help for her sooner; I admit that. But after a while, you kind of get used to it.”

McFarren, 36, said he can’t be certain how long Pam Babcock stayed in the bathroom because “time just went by so quick I can’t pinpoint how long.”

“It just kind of happened one day; she went in and had been in there a little while, the next time it was a little longer. Then she got it in her head she was going to stay — like it was a safe place for her,” McFarren said.

But McFarren said she moved around in the bathroom during that time, bathed and changed into the clothes he brought her. He brought food and water to her. They had conversations and had an otherwise normal relationship — except it all happened in the bathroom.

How…endearing? I guess it’s nice to support your significant other in whatever their hopes and dreams are. But…dude, her skin grew over the toilet seat, and it had to be surgically removed. You could have tried putting your foot down a little more.

Questions I want answers to on this story: when they say “normal relationship,” does that mean…uh, an “active” relationship? And if so…how? Also, if she lived in the bathroom for two years…and she was sitting on the toilet for at least a month…where, um, did this guy go when he had to TCB? Was there a second bath in this trailer? Is there a particularly fertile patch of trees nearby?

I don’t really want to consider the alternatives. Yuck.

Detritus (3/7/08)

Friday, March 7th, 2008 by ptm

1. boston.com: Young rider gives MBTA board an earful

This story is partly interesting because it shows what many of us have always suspected: a 17 year old spending a few minutes a week on the internet can run a public transportation system better than the people at the T. What sold me on it was the end of the article:

Grabauskas [General Manager of the T] said he is eager to meet with Spina [aforementioned 17 year old], go over the report, and show him the T’s operations center.

And by “show him the T’s operations center,” he means smash him in the head with a sackful of old tokens, toss him into a turnstile, and then stuff unused Charlie Tickets down his throat.

2. CNN.com: BBQ-smoker-turned-’Robocop’ chases off bums

I have a few reactions to this:

-There’s something funny to me about a vigilante defender of public morals…who’s defending his bar.

-The guy who laughs at the robot in the video (about 20 seconds before the end) is genius.

-”Defecating. Urinating. Prostituting. Ahh, the whole nine yards.”

-At first, I thought this was built so this guy could scare off unwanted types without actually putting himself in danger. He sends the robot in, if they shoot it or beat it up then all he’s lost is the robot. But it sort of looks like he has to walk about five feet behind the robot at all times to get it to work. So that defeats that purpose. I know believe it was designed purely to freak out people who were very, very high.

-If RoboCop had actually been about a barbecue smoker mounted on a three-wheeled scooter, it wouldn’t have made as much money as it did.

3. boston.com: Ghostbusters Party at Felt

The idea of a Ghostbusters Party is awesome. This thing, however, sounds like someone trying to throw a budget rave in their freshman dorm. At the very least they could have tried to get Ray Parker Jr to show up. What else is he doing this weekend?

The early front runner

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008 by ptm

CNN.com: Ex-Florida prison boss: Drunken orgies tainted system

This has the early lead in the race for, “best headline of 2008.” And the article also contains one of the greatest sentences every uttered by anyone on the face of anything:

“The connection between the softball and the parties and the corruption and the beatings was greatly intertwined.”

Wow. Wow. Nothing about that isn’t genius. The sunshine state, indeed.

The Race for ‘08: Episode I

Tuesday, February 5th, 2008 by ptm

The posts here have been focused a lot in the past few months on topics of sports and arts. (I’ll let you decide which is the bread and which is the circuses.) But what better night than Super Tuesday to bring us back into the political realm?

The big headlines as of this writing focus on Hillary winning California soundly. But progressive sites and even mainstream pundits are pointing out that Obama had a big night. It looks like the race is still close.

On the other side, Heart Huckabee somehow found a way to jump back into the race. Apparently, being a very hardcore right-wing “let’s make God’s law the law in America” candidate can help you win Republican primaries in the south. Who knew? On the other hand, Nathan Petrelli Mitt Romney looks a little washed up, winning his Rep. friends in MA and carrying Mormonland, but not much else. “Frank discussions,” indeed. McCain looks to be pretty close to locking up the nomination, as everyone in the GOP sort of looks at each other, shrugs and says, “Meh? Meh.”

Given the roster of candidates who started in the race, I gotta say: it could be worse. Of the remaining real candidates (sorry, Ron Paul…and sorry to the people on Murdock Street that have the huge Paul sign with the blinking Christmas lights around it), only Huckabee would be a truly scary president. And I don’t care how much extra boost he got tonight or how personable he seems whenever he’s chatting with pundits…his religious views are too extreme even for the Republicans. Look, I don’t want an (R) next to the name of the next resident of the White House…but if it’s really down to McCain and Romney, then whatever. Neither looks that bad in comparison to the W. crew.

All that being said, I think that I’m ready to go all-in on the junior senator from Illinois:

MSNBC: Obama Super Tuesday speech

Dude can definitely orate. Methinks I’m going to have to sit down with The Blueprint For Change in the near future to see if we finally have the candidate that I can pledge my full devotion to. It hasn’t really happened yet in a major election…but this really could be different.

In other words, I haven’t fully caught Obama fever, but I have a strong case of Barack sniffles. And my forehead is feeling very, very warm.

Quick delayed SOTU reaction

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008 by ptm

Last night, George W. Bush delivered his seventh and final State of the Union address. A good time was had by all, especially Republican legislators who deeply feel that Catholic Mass doesn’t have enough standing up and sitting down.

It’s good to feel so active in the political process and that you’re being a good dooby citizen by watching the speech. It’s nice to be reminded that the same patterns work all the time in cajoling the proper reaction out of the congressional audience (it’s either “statement we all agree on / statement we all agree on / controversial stance that only my party members like!” or “controversial statement / controversial statement / seriously questionably ethical controversial statement / we all support and love the troops!”). And it’s fun to watch the walk out of the president after the speech, when the leader of the free world ends up having to deal with a clutch of Washington insiders acting like 9 year olds clamoring behind the dugout waiting for a slugger to sign their ticket stub after batting practice.

But Lisa and I both think that W missed an important solution to two of the problems he brought up. He doesn’t want to risk important human lives for stem cell research. He wants to solve the problem of illegal immigrants. How about this: if you’re in the country illegally, and you can roll up to the local INS office with four fresh and researchable batches of embryonic stem cells, you get a green card. Boom. Two birds and all that.

Does Homeland Security pay residuals for brilliant ideas?

Why so serious?

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008 by ptm

“Did you hear about Heath Ledger?” My mother has a way of introducing subjects that let you know exactly where they’re going…she’s like a walking inadvertent headline writer. As soon as she said that in a particular tone, I knew she wasn’t talking about an arrest or a bad interview or a sudden appearance at a club with Britney. Before she got her next sentence out, I knew we were talking death. And I then had an immediate and visceral response:

What does this mean for the Batman movies?

I’ve never been supremely overly affected by a celebrity death. I was 2 when Lennon died, and by the time George passed, he had been sick for a while and everyone knew it was coming. I didn’t really start liking Nirvana until after Cobain committed suicide, so that day was more thinking about other people who care and less about caring myself. I also hadn’t really started loving the music of Kevin Gilbert or Elliott Smith when they died. The most distraught a celebrity death ever made me was probably when Phil Hartman was killed…that one still would be “too soon” for me if I was playing a game of Celebrity Dinner.

And I can’t say that I’m supremely touched or emotional about the loss of Heath Ledger. He was a damn good actor, and I never heard anything bad about him. It sucks that he died (for whatever reason it turns out he did, whether it’s accidental OD, intentional OD, pneumonia, whatever), and it especially sucks that he left behind a young daughter. Any loss of human life, especially at an early age, is an unfortunate, self-contained tragedy. Godspeed to him on whatever journey he undertakes on the other side. I feel bad that he’s gone. But, you know…not really, soul-chillingly bad.

But…but…OK, I won’t lie that I’ve worried about confronting this before. I spent the first half of this decade secretly terrified that someone integral to the Star Wars movies would croak before they were done. Ewan could spin out on his bike and not be able to complete Episode III. Anthony Daniels could have a stroke before recording all of 3PO’s lines (and the ensuing commercials). Lucas himself could drop the coil. John Williams was my always number 1 fear…he’s not super-old, but he’s not young either, and I could just imagine a despondent Lucas giving an interview to Bill Moyers, saying, “Johnny stopped in the doorway and he pointed at his head and said, ‘George, I have the final theme for you – it’s all up here.’ Then he walked out, and that was the last time I ever saw him. We just cobbled together outtakes from the Special Edition Ewok song to fill the space.”

In other words, yes, when considering the possible death of another human being, I placed the fear that a piece of fluffy celluloid entertainment that I wanted to see might somehow be compromised over the value of the life in question. And now I’m doing it again, but not in a hypothetical situation. It’s Holyfield, and important questions need to be answered: was he finished with filming The Dark Knight? If so, had he done what he needed to do in post-production?* If there have to be reshoots before the June release, what will they do to get new footage? And what if the Joker was supposed to still be around in the third movie…will they recast? Will they do some weird Livia Soprano CGI thing? Will they re-write the whole tale and take the Joker out of chapter 3? If so, what will we be missing by not having the greatest character in this particular universe involved in the story?

These are the things that concern me. Those things, and the fact that I’m a horrible, self-centered human being for caring about a movie instead of someone’s life. But in my defense…the movie looks really good.

R.I.P., Mr. Ledger. I apologize on behalf of my twisted priorities.

*Apparently, Harry Knowles says yes to both of those first two questions. In case you, too, were worried about such things…you savages.