Nothing changes, much

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Yesterday it was snake oil and LAS-I-CO tablets;  today it’s the açaí berry and raspberry weight loss drops. Do yourselves a favor and stick to tested remedies. I don’t care if they are pharmaceutical or alternative… do some research and make sure you’re not taking some worthless camel ejecta just because a friend or a neighbor or Dr. Oz says it’s effective.

science

XKCD

The Old Wolf has spoken.

Neuchâtel, Switzerland

 

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Seen from the air, the waterfront at Neuchâtel. At right on the bottom, the Hotel Beaulac (at least, as of 1984).

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Lac de Neuchâtel from the observation tower at Chaumont.

 

 

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La Maison des Halles – Market Square Mansion, Neuchâtel

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Market day, Neuchâtel

Hard to match this kind of beauty. Switzerland is an unusual country, and it’s not easy to live there… you have to have a respectable amount of money and you have to respect Swiss customs and traditions, but I’m glad I was able to experience it for about 6 months.

The Old Wolf has spoken.

 

Suburban Evening

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This is  just the kind of place I imagine Charlie Brown and his friends living in. Schulz on occasion drew fairly detailed interiors for his cartoons, but not often – I’m sure they took a lot more time. But when he did, they were filled with furniture that would have fit in a suburban dwelling just like this. Having been born in the early 50’s, pictures like this take me right back.

The Old Wolf has spoken.

The VFX dilemma: It’s not easy being green

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If it weren’t for VFX (visual effects) people, that’s just what Avatar and Lord of the Rings would look like.

There’s a lot of buzz on the internet right now about Bill Westenhofer’s suddenly-interrupted Oscar speech for “The Life of Pi.” Many people are interpreting this as a deliberate sabotage or a snub of VFX workers, but everything I have read seems to indicate that all participants were briefed early on about how much time they would have (one minute) and what would happen if they went overtime (the music from “Jaws”, followed by a cutaway.) It would seem that Mr. Westenhofer was simply not aware of how quickly one minute passes, and instead of jumping straight to his message, he exulted in the moment – which is what Oscar wins are for anyway.

I can’t speak to reality, because I just don’t have enough information. By Occam’s Razor it would indicate more happenstance than malice was at work here. But the more important point is that the event brought the entire issue of VFX studios into the public eye, and that’s a good thing.

Longtime critic and commentator Drew McWeeny published an open letter to Hollywood yesterday, and if you’re a consumer of films, either from Hollywood or independent producers, you would do a lot worse than to read this article – and the following commentary, which is just as enlightening.

The executive summary? Major studios are inserting hard objects into every possible orifice of VFX companies, who in turn are inserting hard objects into every possible orifice of those who work for them. And that’s the polite version. But read the letter, and the commentary, and then branch out and do your own research.

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None of this is new, of course. “The Wizard of Speed and Time,” while a delightful and entertaining film in its own right, is essentially a rant by Mike Jittlov about having hard objects inserted into every possible orifice by the movie studios of his own time… and things have only gotten worse. Now, instead of creative geniuses like Jittlov working on their own and being screwed, we have entire stables of very talented people being worked insane hours without compensation (either not being paid overtime, or not being paid at all beyond their base wages), having no benefits, being classified as independent contractors despite working full-time for their companies, having no representation, simply seeing their jobs eliminated as studios outsource their work to places like India, having their whereabouts monitored, and even being threatened with physical abuse if they don’t perform like gods. Two other good reads are at the VFX Soldier and io9.

Granted, this is the outrage du jour. Public fickleness being what it is, the tempest will calm and people will go back to their lives as soon as yesterday… but for those working in the industry, the intolerable conditions will continue. But it raises a question in my own mind: as a consumer, what’s my responsibility?

Many people are up in arms about genetically modified foods, and consumers right and left are declining to shop at places that sell GMO’s; many people refuse to buy coffee that isn’t Fair Trade; Apple felt the pressure of public outrage and stepped up their game with their Chinese suppliers; even humble quinoa has raised a few eyebrows after it was found that increasing Western demand has so raised prices that local producers can no longer afford their own product. People get mad about stuff, and they do things.

It’s long been known that (with a few notable exceptions in cases of truly ethical companies), the only way to influence an industry is to hit it where it really hurts – in the wallet. Hollywood studios are interested in only one thing – maximizing dollars for themselves, and minimizing dollars spent on other people. Those dollars, however, come from us. You and me. The lovers of Avatar, The Lord of the Rings, The Avengers, you name it. If it were not for these talented people (and the writers, of course, but that’s another essay), I would not have been able to laugh myself silly watching Hulk toss Loki around like a rag doll – best moment in the whole film, if you ask me – these films would be worth less than nothing without the VFX people behind the visual magic.

It’s a tough issue, because good movies are a large part of my entertainment, and a great way to escape the daily grind, or to forget about the douchebaggery and unfairness that pervades 21st-Century society. Giving up all movies until the VFX people have fair and effective representation would be one solution, but would have little effect unless enough people chose this route to cut revenues for Hollywood, and the chances of that are… well, “snowball in Hell” is what comes to mind.

At the very least, I can contribute to raising the awareness of people about the issue. This article is a tiny drop in the ocean, but it’s a lot of tiny drops coming together that create a flood. I can also be more judicious about what I watch and when, and continue to think about the issue from the consumer side. The people who are at the heart of more and more movies at least deserve that much consideration.

The Old Wolf has spoken.

How hospital bills are killing us

Goodness, what a surprise.

Please read this article by Steven Brill from Time Magazine. It’s frightening.

Of course, it’s all about money and power. And people who have it will do anything – anything – to keep it that way, even if it means raping 99% of Americans in the wallet. And we wonder why healthcare in this country is so expensive and such a critical issue.

The Old Wolf has spoken.

Alternatives to Amazon

In Germany, they’re fighting hard for the independent bookseller. Just found this German version over at Glaserei, noting that ZVAB and AbeBooks are both owned by Amazon, which I did not know.

For us English speakers, there’s this article over at Biblio.com, which includes a link to this New York Times article: Online Shoppers are Rooting for the Little Guy

The marrow of the article:

Try these independent companies:

Marketplaces: Biblio (of course), AntiqbookLivre Rare BookMaremagnumPowell’s BooksABAA.org*, Tomfolio*, andIOBAbooks.com*
Meta Searches: AddALLviaLibriMarelibri
Inventory Software: BookHoundBookTrakkerBiblioDirector
Website Providers: BibliopolisForeseeing Solutions
Book Order Management: Art of BooksIndaba

*These book searches  provide customers with books supplied only by bookseller members of those particular organizations.

For the record, I have nothing against Amazon as a consumer – mostly because they’re convenient, and often cheaper, and I get free shipping. But I shop the indies whenever I can find them as well. I think there’s room for everyone, and losing the neighborhood stores is always a loss. That reminds me, I need to watch “You’ve Got Mail” again.

For my friends in Salt Lake, I’ll recommend The King’s English bookshop.

The Old Wolf has spoken.

Project Mercury

Alan Shepard, the first American in space and the fifth to walk on the moon, the only one of the Mercury 7 to do so.

I watched Project Mercury with amazement at the age of 10, as did all of America.

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Project Mercury commemorative stamp mint sheet

Project Mercury Single

 

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We watched one of the space program’s first nail-biters as John Glenn re-entered the atmosphere with his retropack still attached… controllers were worried that the capsule’s heat shield may have partially detached, and decided to allow re-entry without jettisoning the retrorockets so that the straps would help the heat shield stay on. As history records, the capsule returned to earth safely.

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The Freedom 7 II Mercury Capsule 15B. Shepard had hoped to repeat his historic flight in this capsule, now in the Udvar-Hazy annex of the National Air and Space Museum of the Smithsonian, but NASA was by that time turning their attention to the Gemini program.

The original Freedom 7 capsule on display at the Naval Academy in Annapolis. The capsule is now on the road and will ultimately find a home at the Smithsonian some time in 2016.

Over 50 years after John Glenn’s historic flight in Friendship 7, the end of the space shuttle program means we now have no way of launching our own astronauts into space. The way things are going, it looks like private industry will be successful in coming up with new re-usable vehicles before our government ever gets back on the bandwagon. Somehow I think that’s sad, in light of the billions of dollars being wasted overseas on questionable military ventures and wasteful hardware programs.

The Old Wolf has spoken.

South African Scam

Untypically, this one came from South Africa instead of Nigeria. This effort spells crudeness in the extreme, yet – astonishingly and sadly – there will be people who fall for this.

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Terrible grammar, unbelievable premise, spelling mistakes, and improbable representations (Susan Boyle as “Microsoft Awards Secretary”, Oprah Winfrey as a “price winner”).

If there were every any question in your mind, no – you haven’t won a contest that you didn’t enter, and these people are only looking to lighten your wallet.

The Old Wolf has spoken.

The Amici Fidissimi Fraternity – University of Utah, 1911

Some images from a century ago.

Edited for additional information found here:

It was on this day 106 years ago, December 31, 1914, that Phi Delta Theta’s 32nd Biennial General Convention, meeting in Birmingham, Alabama from December 28, 1914 – January 1, 1915 approved, on a unanimous vote, the petition from the Amici Fidissimi Society at the University of Utah, and approved a charter for the A.F. Society creating the Utah Alpha Chapter of Phi Delta Theta. The General Convention was the only body authorized to grant charters at that time in the Fraternity’s history. The Amici Fidissimi Society was originally formed at the University of Utah in 1903 in the days when Utah had no fraternities. (Follow the above link for more history).

Amici Fidissimi is Latin for “most faithful friends.”

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The A.F. Fraternity House

Fraternity House Scene

Two fraternity members take their ease. [1]

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Fraternity House Billiard Table

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Fraternity House Common Room

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Bench and Table; notice the signatures of past members.

The Old Wolf has spoken.


[1] The gentleman on the left coincidentally happens to be my grandfather, Delbert M. Draper, Senior.