24 December 2008

It's the Economy Stupid Wednesday



We are going to be paying to clean up this mess. I am glad that Bush issued executive orders that will prevent these environmental fuck ups. Opps, no he didn't. He recently did the opposite. I think I am now going to document the Fuck Yous that Bush gives to the country on the way out.

By the way, is this what clean coal looks like?

Tom Friedman wrote a good op-ed on our shitty infrastructure. The whole thing is worth a read.

Is the Chicago School of Economics dead now? Please?

I know corporate boardrooms are full of yes men and rife with greed where no one ever gets fired. But those overseeing the banking system aren't much better. Chris Cox is in a major shit storm of his own doing, and this royal asshat, who was caught up in the S&L crisis in the 1980s, need to be fired and then put in the stocks on the National Mall so I can throw rotten fruit at him. How these people can look at themselves in the mirror most days is beyond me. Denial ain't just a rive in Egypt.


_John

09 December 2008

The Audacity of Audacity


The don of Illinois Gov. Rod R. Blagojevic got arrested this morning and released from jail this afternoon. Is he going to resign? Hell No! Is the going to get impeached? You betcha. Is he going to name Obama's successor? Who knows.

Here is what we know. He loves the word Fuck, avoids ethics at all costs, is arrogant as all get out, and amazingly enough pledged to rein in the excesses of campaign finance with soon-to-be-introduced reforms that would “rock the system in Springfield.”

Oh yeah, and he has balls of steel, which should serve him well in the BIG HOUSE.




I really don't think Obama has many connections to Blago. Why? When he announced in Springfield that he was running for Pres, no Blago on the stage. After he wrapped up the nomination and held a rally in Springfield, not Blago on stage. DNC where every Democrat seemed to speak, no Blago. The Grant Park rally after winning the presendency, no Blago. Maybe he was tipped off, or maybe he just knew Blago was dirty. Whichever it is we do know that he didn't ever owe Blago anything because Blago would have definitely called in his chips when Obama won. From what was published today it doesn't seem like Obama owes him a thing.

More NBC news

How the fuck did this happen?




No, I don't mean someone giving Jimmy Fallon a show, though that is a perfectly legitimate question. How did he land The Roots? ?uestlove? God? Anyone? I might have to TiVo just to watch The Roots most nights. Wonder who is going to fill in when they go on the road? It can be a large step down from them Jimmy...just thought I would let you know.


_John

National Boring Company

And the Network yawned.

First David Gregory gets appointed to moderate Meet the Press and now the announcement that Jay Leno is going to host a five night a week show in the 10 o'clock time slot that is sorta kinda like The Tonight Show. Here are my thoughts if you really care.

On Gregory:

I think NBC news wants to stay FAR away from anyone who has a sniff of partisanship, which Mike Murphy or anyone from the MSNBC roster has in oodles -- not that that is in and of itself a bad thing. Gregory is a safe, if completely uninspiring, choice. His show on MSNBC is/was forgettable, and I don't ever see him rocking the boat with any of his guests. In fact I don't see him putting a new spin on MTP at all. My bet is that he will just use the Russert model with little innovation or distinction. I give him 5 years.

I was hoping that they would return to the old version of MTP with a moderator (say Gregory) and a few reporters/press who get to question a the guest(s). You could have press from the right and left asking tough questions with (gasp!) follow up questions. For God's sake the fucking roundtables need to be executed from MTP post haste because theirs are exceptionally dreadful. They are mind numbing and provide little to no information. If I wanted the convential wisdom from the Washington establishment I would just shut down my brain and read David Broder. (And yes that is me taking a giant swipe at the old windbag of conventional beltway sages who's time passed decades ago.)

On Leno:

Please NBC. This was a purely defensive move. You green light shitty programs that no one wants to watch (like the much hyped My Own Worst Enemy or Knight Rider...seriously Knight Rider?), and you were pissing your pants that Leno might take his star power to ABC. So you gut your 10 o'clock slot for the weekdays. In essence then you totally giving up on edgy programing then because you really can't air anything adult before 10. So you put too many eggs in your basket with 1990s Must See TV and ran it into the ground. You let a few shows run just too long, like Fraiser, and you kept shocking e.r. with defibrillation paddles for an extra 5 season trying to resuscitate a show that should have slipped into death due to natural causes. You expanded from one Law & Order to three -- all of which I still watch on an irregular basis, and though some of the actors have been unwatchable the current casts are actually really good again, but just stop the "Ripped from the headlines" bullshit and pay your writers to come up with original stories. I do give you kudos for show patience with some shows in the recent past, such as The Office, and currently with Life. I do wonder how my two favorite shows of this year eluded your gasp: The Emmy award winning Mad Men (on AMC), the somewhat violent Sons of Anarchy (F/X), and another one I am trying to catch up on is Breaking Bad (again AMC, and again winner of an Emmy). All three of these shows are 10 o'clock shows, as is e.r. Are you going to stop developing adult approriate shows and just ceded that audience to ABC, CBS, and cable networks? If so you are sadly playing your hand on the wrong side of history.

Young people don't regularly watch late night teevee. I am sure you will hold the baby boomers, especially the tailing end of it, and that generation right before Gen X. But Gen X and onward are not drawn to the late night shows like previous generations because we never really lived during a time of nearly infinite channel choices. Our choices after the nightly news were not Johnny Carson, NightLine, or whatever else used to be called late night programming. There is no mystique around that time slot for us and I bet a lot of the younger viewers are like me in that when we watch, it is because we want to see which entertainer is on to be interviewed or perform and not to enjoy the pleasure of spending an hour with the host and his witty repartee. Yes, I still watch Letterman on occasion -- I was never wild about Leno -- and do check out Conan and the Late Late show once in a while, but that is rare and usually on TiVo.

NBC made the boring and easy choices. Their slow slide in their viewership will continue unabated, and I let out a giant yawn in their honor.


_John

PS. NBC's sports department are still morons. Losing the NFL all those years ago only to overpay to get the Sunday night game? You have the NHL, but treat it like a red-headed stepchild. If you didn't want it than you didn't have to pay for it -- I know it came relatively cheap (Gary Bettman I am looking at you), but come on how about a little exposure and marketing? The NHL was near third place as a sport in terms of ratings before lock out. (The lock out was good and bad for the sport, but I will get into that later.) You are the sports channel of the Olympics and golf (and maybe NASCAR, I can't remember and don't care about four left turns), and other random "sports" that I don't watch most weekends of the year on your desert of a sports broadcasting. How is all of this working out for you? Seriously you can't be happy about that. No MLB, lost the NBA, and your only college football is Notre Dame. Notre Dame football got you to pay how much to watch them get destroyed every week?

After writing all of this I have to ask: Who the hell is making decisions at that network? Seriously, have you made any good financial decisions recently with your programming? Seriously.

25 November 2008

It's the Economy Stupid Wednesday

It's back...

Oh whatever happened to the Wall Street cheerleaders on my cable business teevee?



Oh yeah, I forgot it is either rainbows and unicorns or doom and gloom. They hurt my head. Although I bet Rupert is ruing the day he decided to start Fox Business channel right before the market went south.

It could be worse: We could have a totalitarian one-party state that is starting to piss itself because of the tumbling price of oil. Ahhhh...the petro dollar roller coaster. The problems of putting all your eggs in one basket, sorta like our housing bubble, but much much worse.


_John

23 November 2008

Post-election break


I needed a break after the election and was planning on just a series of light weeks with PODs, but my health and daylights savings time were against me. Currently I have some kind of undiagnosed sinus problem that is causing intense sinus pressure in my head and also in my inner ears. It has the fun side effect of being completely physically draining and I believe if I had absolutely nothing to do that I could easily sleep for 18+ hours a day. Alas I have a full plate with work and my dissertation, so what little energy I have in reserve each day is spent on other things than the blog. (In case you are wondering I have a appointment with an ear, nose, and throat specialist after Thanksgiving because my doctor has finally run out of things to try. We also figured out that I might have been suffering from whatever I have since early last spring, since what I believed was allergies all spring, summer, and fall may have been what I am still suffering from. Yeah, fun stuff.)

Where have the PODs gone? Very good question. To wit I would respond, Where has the sunlight gone? I have darkness when I get out of work, so it makes it hard to take a daily picture. Until the sunlight returns I will be posting "Random pictures of the week." Though I will probably start with "Random pictures from November" to play catch up for my down time.

In case any of you were wondering one of my pictures has been chosen as a finalist for a internet mapping company's dc map. Kind of cool. Here is the picture. I have a little extra personal love for Ben, so despite the fact that I think I have better dc pics, it is kind of flattering. I will let you know when I lose. Again behold the power of the cellphone camera!


_John

image: "Mr. Beagle" from Macorig Paolo

05 November 2008

Picture of the Day -- 05 November 2008


Another grayish day with spots of sun.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 04 November 2008


Election day in del ray. The New York Times was at the same voting location today too.


_John

Unyielding Hope.


Know Hope.

The road ahead will be long. Our climb will be steep. We may not get there in one year or even one term, but America – I have never been more hopeful than I am tonight that we will get there. I promise you – we as a people will get there.

There will be setbacks and false starts. There are many who won’t agree with every decision or policy I make as President, and we know that government can’t solve every problem. But I will always be honest with you about the challenges we face. I will listen to you, especially when we disagree. And above all, I will ask you join in the work of remaking this nation the only way it’s been done in America for two-hundred and twenty-one years – block by block, brick by brick, calloused hand by calloused hand.

What began twenty-one months ago in the depths of winter must not end on this autumn night. This victory alone is not the change we seek – it is only the chance for us to make that change. And that cannot happen if we go back to the way things were. It cannot happen without you.

So let us summon a new spirit of patriotism; of service and responsibility where each of us resolves to pitch in and work harder and look after not only ourselves, but each other. Let us remember that if this financial crisis taught us anything, it’s that we cannot have a thriving Wall Street while Main Street suffers – in this country, we rise or fall as one nation; as one people.

...

...And to those Americans whose support I have yet to earn – I may not have won your vote, but I hear your voices, I need your help, and I will be your President too.

...

...And to all those watching tonight from beyond our shores, from parliaments and palaces to those who are huddled around radios in the forgotten corners of our world – our stories are singular, but our destiny is shared, and a new dawn of American leadership is at hand. To those who would tear this world down – we will defeat you. To those who seek peace and security – we support you. And to all those who have wondered if America’s beacon still burns as bright – tonight we proved once more that the true strength of our nation comes not from our the might of our arms or the scale of our wealth, but from the enduring power of our ideals: democracy, liberty, opportunity, and unyielding hope.

For that is the true genius of America – that America can change. Our union can be perfected. And what we have already achieved gives us hope for what we can and must achieve tomorrow.


_President-elect Barak Obama

03 November 2008

Picture of the Day -- 03 November 2008


Preparations for Nov. 4 2008.


_John

RIP Madelyn Dunham


It is with a heavy heart that Obama and his family finishes his campaign as his grandmother ("Toot") passed away after her long battle with cancer. Here is what he said about his grandmother today on the trail. Though she couldn't make it to the finish line, she was the driving force beyond Barak, and I hope she reached her final resting place in peace knowing hope.




_John


image: Obama for America.

Day Zero. Hope

This is Hope. (And the only political closing message that I have ever heard that drew a strong emotional response every time I have watched it.)



Today. Dare to HOPE. Believe in HOPE. Choose HOPE. And Vote.


_John

One Day -- Night Edition

Bueller? Bueller?


Still in need of convincing? Try on this essay by (little "c") conservative Andrew Sullivan. It is both intellectually and emotionally engaging. Go read.



_John

One Day -- Evening Edition


Hope.


_John

One Day -- on Voting and Making it Count

Tomorrow be prepared for long lines, and be prepared to stay and have your vote counted. Also be prepared for any possible voter intimidation issues. Here are a few things to be ready for.





[Not sure if the YouTube poster got permission to post from Bill Moyers' Journal, so here is the link to the video on the show's site. Note to PBS, EMBED please.]

From the Campaigns:
http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/10172008/watch3.html




[I would have posted a similar message from any of the other campaigns, but I could not find them or they don't exist. I will update if this page if they come out this afternoon.]


For your election polling place please visit www.canivote.org or call your local election board.

If you are planning on taking your camera to your polling place, please be aware of state and local laws. And if you shoot any good footage, please send it along to Video You Vote.


_John

02 November 2008

Two Days -- Late Night Edition


Hope.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 02 November 2008


Rock Creek on the way home from a Villagers tie. (This one, beyond my own personal injuries, was a good one.)


_John

Two Days -- California Evening Edition (UPDATED)


Vote No on 8. We are still a young country, but we should be well beyond our past of legislating discrimination.

Update: Obama in his own words.



_John

Two days


Hope in action. Powerful, real, important. Please read it to understand fully what is going on away from what the teevee is covering.


_John

31 October 2008

30 October 2008

FIve Days night edition

See more Ron Howard videos at Funny or Die


Opie and Richie Cunningham return to ask you to vote. So vote.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 30 October 2008


The long shadows of fall.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 29 October 2008


Morning before Game 5 finally continues.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 28 October 2008


Gunmetal gray skies moving in.


_John

Five Days


Hope.


_John

PHUCK YEAH!


WORLD SERIES CHAMPIONS. HOW SWEET IT IS!


_John

28 October 2008

It's the Economy Stupid Wednesday

See more Natalie Portman videos at Funny or Die


The Greenspan files:
here, here, and below




And there was a rate cut yesterday and the Dow is still like a wild roller coaster ride, I am not sure what it all really means at this point because the PHILLIES WON THE WORLD SERIES.


_John

One Week

See more Judd Apatow videos at Funny or Die

HOPE.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 27 October 2008


Ugly rainy day in dc land.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 26 October 2008


A great bagel place on the east side on Third between 23rd and 24th -- Pick A Bagel. The sign was just too funny not to take a picture of it.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 25 October 2008


Rainy evening on the east side of Manhattan.


_John

24 October 2008

Picture of the Day -- 24 October 2008


Gray fall day on the Potomac.

[I will be away for the weekend, so I will post again when I return.]


_John

Picture of the Day -- 23 October 2008


Fall evening over del ray.


_John

23 October 2008

It's the Economy Stipid Wednesday


Brought to you on Thursday morning.

The Dow, like a roller coaster that just won't stop, over th past month has made my stomach a bit queasy, so this week I bring you a depressing chart or two.


And if that one wasn't special enough, here is one that you can play with and give yourself some vertigo.

Oh and don't pull out that credit card because I am betting the interest rates are about to go through the roof. Why? Take a gander at this chart:



Here is an article from earlier this week that spells out the madness of the US love of putting life on credit.

Don't worry things could be worse: You could be a member of the Philadelphia Flyers, who have started the season with a grotesque 0-3-3 record. At least for them, the Phils are in the World Series and the Eagles still have a chance this season.


_John


image: "NO BARFING" from richardmasoner

Picture of the Day -- 22 October 2008


Game 1. Phils lead the Rays 1-0. [Would have taken a better picture, but cellphone was dead until I got home after work to charge it.]


_John

19 October 2008

Picture of the Day -- 19 October 2008


Fall leaves in Rock Creek. Villagers win! Villagers win!


_John

Picture of the Day -- 18 October 2008


Weekend sky in del ray. It finally feels like fall now.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 17 October 2008


Metro Friday, or I don't think it is wise to Exit at this moment.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 16 October 2008


Morning sky.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 15 October 2008


The beginning of fall colors in del ray.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 14 October 2008


[Sorry for the laziness of my posting. I have been spending what little free time I have getting my technology straightened out with my fixed mac. Well that, and I have been a touch under the weather this week.]

Fall evening.


_John

16 October 2008

World Series bound


And it is off to the World Series for the Phils for the first time in 15 years. I do remember that team, but I sure as hell don't remember the Wheeze Kids of 1983, who lost to the O's, or the 1980 team that won it all. That is not to say I don't know who they are or that the image of the Tugger striking out Willie Wilson of the Royals for the first ever World Series championship for the Phils isn't also burned into my retinas. I remember them in the way that Philly sports fans remember their winning teams, like the 1983 Sixers with the Doc, Moses, and Mo Cheeks, or the Stanley Cups that came to the city of Brotherly Love in 1974 and 1975. Heck, we even remember Jaws losing in the Super Bowl in 1980 – the Birds are the only major sports franchise in the city without a city without winning it all. (Yes, they won the 1948, 1949, and 1960 NFL championships, but come on the last of these was a few years before the merger the first Super Bowl. I count them like I count the Phantoms, Wings, and Soul championships. They are what they are, but they aren't the championship of a major modern sports teams.)

So it is with this team that we faithful of Philly sports will hang our hat on this year to bring an end to our 25 year championship drought. Oh we have tried in the years intervening: The Flyers in 1984-85, 1986-87, and again in 1996-97; the Phils in 1993, the Sixers in 2001, and most recently the Eagles in Super Bowl XXXIX in 2005. Most of these teams were underdogs and ended up completely over matched, but in Philly we wouldn't have it any other way. A city of dynasties we are not. A town of legions of fans who know more and care more about sports than any city I have ever spent time in. We boo because we give a care, maybe too much some times. And we prefer an honest effort and emotion over elite skill set. Which brings me to this years team and last night's win. The quote speaks volumes, and probably means more in Philly than it would in any other city.

"You know what? It hasn't hit me yet," [Jimmy] Rollins said. "We still have a lot of work to do. We've got to find a way to win four more games. That's our goal. Our goal is to win the World Series. The goal was not just to win the National League. The goal was not just to get to the World Series. We qualified. That's all we did. So we've still got work to do.

"But when it's all said and done, and my career's over, and hopefully we win the World Series, then that legend of the Phillies in 2008 will be a great story. But until then, we've still got four games to win."


Read all of Jayson Stark's article here. (By the way his coverage, despite not picking the Phils to beat the Dodgers, has been excellent. I would expect nothing less from a man who cut his teeth following the Phils for many years for the Philly Inq.) Oh, and how sweet it is that all of the cheerleading for the Dodgers by Fox Sports, especially Joe Buck and Idiot Tim McCarver, went for naught. I know that it would have been ratings gold for them to have Manny and Joe Torre return to Fenway. But the fact of the matter is the Sox aren't going to win their series, so why not try to turn the story in the the bad luck Phils versus the up and comer Rays. Fox and its announcers just couldn't bring themselves to do it. Their dream died hard, but mine lives on.


_John

image: from Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images

Presidential Debate #3


What did I miss? Seriously, I checked over only a few times during commercial break and pitching changes as my beloved Phils phucked the Dodgers in Chavez Ravine last night. It's off to the World (cough, US/Canada) Series for the first time in 15 years. More on that in a minute.

And yes Virginia that is an actual unphotoshopped image right after the debate ended.


_John

image: from Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty

15 October 2008

It's the Economy Stupid Wednesday


Why did the credit markets freeze? That is a good question and it goes to a major root of our current fiscal mess.

This American Life recently had another stupendous show this month on what lead to the credit freeze. "Another Frightening Show About the Economy" is broken down into three parts. The first part deals with paper. Paper? Yes the commercial paper market. The second part deals explains what the fuck Credit Default Swaps (CDS) are, how we got them, and why the broke the buck. "Break the buck" you say, and I say, yes, so go listen to it. Part three is about why CDSs aren't regulated. You will better understand what is going on right now that any other explanation I have heard or seen on teevee. They explain everything in terms that non-economists can understand, but not in the childish and occasionally insulting way that has recently appeared on my idiot box.

More on CDSs. Rolling Stone's Matt Taibbi and The National Review's Byron York argued over a few things in a New York magazine online discussion. Taibbi, though I don't always agree with him (or his politics), never suffers fools lightly and on economic issues he takes York out to the woodshed. (Disclaimer: I don't know if everything Taibbi is true, but I know York is off his fucking rocker.)

B.Y.: [O]n the financial meltdown in particular, if you're suggesting that that is a Republican creation, or even more specifically a McCain creation, I think you're on pretty shaky ground.

M.T.: You don't think the unregulated CDS market was a major factor in the current crisis? Were you watching when AIG almost went under? Were you watching the Lehman collapse?

B.Y.: I think that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were also major factors. And I believe that many of the problems in the mortgage area can be attributed to the confluence of Democratic and Republican priorities: the Democrats' desire to give mortgages to people, particularly minorities, who could not afford them, and the Republicans' desire to achieve an "ownership society," in part by giving mortgages to people who could not afford them. Again, I believe that if you are suggesting that the financial crisis is a Republican creation, or even more specifically a McCain creation, I think you're on pretty shaky ground.

M.T.: Oh, come on. Tell me you're not ashamed to put this gigantic international financial Krakatoa at the feet of a bunch of poor black people who missed their mortgage payments. The CDS market, this market for credit default swaps that was created in 2000 by Phil Gramm's Commodities Future Modernization Act, this is now a $62 trillion market, up from $900 billion in 2000. That's like five times the size of the holdings in the NYSE. And it's all speculation by Wall Street traders. It's a classic bubble/Ponzi scheme. The effort of people like you to pin this whole thing on minorities, when in fact this whole thing has been caused by greedy traders dealing in unregulated markets, is despicable.


Interesting new focus on Brooksley E. Born, head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), who screamed in the wilderness in the late 1990s about regulating the derivatives market. Seems she was right and luminaries such as Greenspan, Rubin, and Summers were, how do say this with some tact, looking left for oncoming traffic in London.

The Beige Book was awful reading today. The WSJ, however, found the few bright spots.

Things could be worse, you could own a house in Detroit.


_John

image: "Paper rolls at the Seattle Times plant" from buddyspotz

13 October 2008

Picture of the Day -- 13 October 2008


Though it did feel like fall today, it is really starting to look that way.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 12 October 2008


Through Rock Creek after a the game. Villagers tie?!?


_John

Picture of the Day -- 11 October 2008


Quiet Saturday morning on the Potomac.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 10 October 2008


Dupont Circle and my way to a concert at the 9:30 Club. (More on that later.)


_John

Picture of the Day -- 09 October 2008


Metro Thursday?


_John

Picture of the Day -- 08 October 2008


Shadows inside as I wait for Apple to tell me my laptop is fixed.


_John

08 October 2008

It's the Economy Stupid Wednesday

uhggggg....

At least we aren't Iceland or Pakistan or Russia or Indonesia.

Be happy.



It could be worse.


_John

07 October 2008

The Obama-McCain debate II Moment


Unless there is some grand moment in a presidential debate (a la Nixon sweating profusely in 1960), presidential debates have a cumulative effect in the voting populace. How we remember debates historically are moments like H. W. checking his watch in 1992 or Lloyd Besten's Kennedy smack down of Dan Quayle in 1988. This debate unfortunately for John McCain had one of those moments.



We will be watching this for years, and in fact if this election turns out to be a landslide our children will probably be watching it. McCain's anger and distain for Obama was palpable for a second straight debate, and it was once again disturbing to watch. Unless something earth shattering occurs, I think this might be our last memory of a man who used to exude honor and dignity.


_John

image: found on The Daily Dish

The Popping of a Myth


John McCain has destroyed his personal image whether he wins the 2008 election for presidency or not. I have linked on occasion to Andrew Sullivan and Joe Klien, both of whom used to revere the man, but can no longer stomach him. Perhaps they didn't really know him, perhaps they were blinded by what they only wanted to see, perhaps McCain has really changed as much as we have seen these past few months in his craven desire to win an election, or maybe it is a little bit of all these and something things that I have missed.

Today for whatever reason seems to a watershed day for The Atlantic as James Fallows has had enough,* and Marc Ambinder mocks McCain's speech today.

Joe Klein now reads like a woman who is far enough away from a suddenly abusive spouse to really see and understand who her abuser for the first time. Today he goes after the McCain campaign with the precision black and white photographer. There is no longer any gray areas left for McCain (and Palin) to hide from Klein's camera. The first tackles the new tact of the campaign and Palin, and the second on McCain's speech is short and sweet.

And not to outdone, Rolling Stone dedicates a large chunk of their current issue to McCain entitled "Make-Believe Maverick." The online version includes additional web only features.


_John

*Sullivan on Fallows today: "I'm afraid that Jim is dealing with what we're all dealing with: the fact that the myth we had of McCain is, in fact, a lie. The real McCain - dishonest, dishonorable and despicable - is now in plain sight. To say I'm disillusioned would be an understatement. The last six weeks have shown us all something we'd rather never have found out. But we can't ignore it now, can we?"

image: "Pop cloud 1" from AMagill

Reaping what you so

Check out McCain's face when someone answers his question, "Who is the real Barack Obama?"



Some a-hole yells TERRORIST if you didn't quite make it out. Feed hate in, you will get it back old man. Glad he corrected that answer. When I think I couldn't get any angrier at McCain, he just keeps lowering the bar. What do you do when you completely run out of respect for a human being? Seriously, I don't know.

Ambinder has more.


_John

Palin debate redux


Palin's debate flow chart from Adennak, which also seems to work when she attempts to answer any questions.

The Fargo interview:



Yeah, I know I am a few days late, but I have been sick and without my mac, so cut me a break. I just wanted to get these in before the Obama-McCain (or McCain-Obama) town hall meeting tomorrow.


_John

06 October 2008

SNL nails the VP debate



If you haven't seen it, sit right back and prepare to laugh. Queen Latifa is the prefect Gwen Ifill, except QL asked a follow up question, which Gwen did not.


_John

Don't Vote



I hope everyone is registered because by the time most of my handful of US readers get around to this the registration date has probably past. Beyond posting this a bit later than I wanted, it is also a touch long, and has language safe for work. Hell it even has my identical twin, Tobey Maguire. I have never seen the resemblance, but I hear it at least once a year from someone new in my life. Strange, but true.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 06 October 2008


A strange noise outside my window yielded a squirrel eating an acorn. Luckily for he, it stayed still long enough for me to get this shot off. The squirrels in my neighborhood are unusually skittish despite the copious amounts of both acorns and people. Guess I can't blame them.

Now that I am caught up, I hope to never fall this far behind unless I am sick again, have surgery, or on vacation where I don't have access to a safe computer with internet.


_John

Picture of the Day -- 05 October 2008


After the Villagers soccer match. Did you know there was a section of dc called Bloomingdale? Neither did I. Oh, and Villagers win! Villagers win! (We are 3-1, I missed our loss last week when I was in Baltimore and Wayne.)


_John

Picture of the Day -- 04 October 2008


At Art on the Avenue in del ray. Luckily for me the farmers market was off due to the all day event because I didn't crawl out of bed until around noon. It is a very cool event every year that bring the neighborhood and beyond together for art, music, food, and community. This is only my second year going, but as long as I am down here I intend to go every year. I bought a few pieces of art from a local artist, and maybe even next year I will spend more time there if I am not ill or attending solo. If I remember in time, perhaps I might volunteer.


_John