Please Vote for Me
If you want to see a really engaging documentary, this one hour movie was quite good. Here's AO Scott's preview of Please Vote For Me. This convinced Mary and I to rent it and we weren't disappointed.
If you want to see a really engaging documentary, this one hour movie was quite good. Here's AO Scott's preview of Please Vote For Me. This convinced Mary and I to rent it and we weren't disappointed.
Reid, Pelosi, the Republicans who helped break McCain's filibuster, Secretary Gates, the military leadership, and Obama too, all made this happen. But Lieberman turned out to be the force needed to get repeal passed at the end of the day. Who'd have guessed? A great day for civil rights in the US.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h2OfQdYrHRs?wmode=transparent]
In response to the reader protests of recent years, I’ve returned to the time-honored tradition of ten films arranged in order from one to ten. After that, it’s all alphabetical. The notion of objectively ordering works of art seems bizarre to me. via blogs.suntimes.com Short list: 1) The Social Network 2) The Kings Speech 3) Black Swan 4) I Am Love 5) Winter’s Bone 6) Inception 7) The Secret in their Eyes 8) The American 9) The Kids Are All Right 10) The Ghost Writer I’ve only seen four of these, and I really liked those that I did. The Read more…
The House just passed a standalone bill to repeal DADT, which was expected; the bigger news is that Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME) has now committed to voting for repeal, after she voted no last week over what she said were procedural issues. You never know with those two Maine senators, but if Snowe keeps her commitment, that gives DADT repeal 59 of the 60 votes needed to get past the Republican filibuster. Sens. Scott Brown (R-MA) and Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) are the key uncommitted senators at this point. via talkingpointsmemo.com If this is really all the farther away from repeal Read more…
via antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov From the description of the photo: Explanation: Is that a spaceship or a cloud? Although it may seem like an alien mothership, it’s actually a impressive thunderstorm cloud called a supercell. Such colossal storm systems center on mesocyclones — rotating updrafts that can span several kilometers and deliver torrential rain and high winds including tornadoes. Jagged sculptured clouds adorn the supercell’s edge, while wind swept dust and rain dominate the center. A tree waits patiently in the foreground. The above supercell cloud was photographed in July west of Glasgow, Montana, USA, caused minor damage, and lasted several hours Read more…
I've been thinking a lot about the relationship between Tacoma and Seattle, and yesterday it got me thinking about a different relationship: Brooklyn and Manhattan. Manhattan is, without a doubt, a hub of commerce, art, and so many other things it would be hard to list them all here. But Brooklyn is known for being cool. A great place to live. It's know for different kinds of art, different kinds of people, a different kind of price-per-square foot on housing (at least in comparison to Manhattan). And it made me think: what would it take for Tacoma to have national Read more…
via youtube.com Well worth the 4 minutes. I’ve seen this data before, but the way of presenting it, and the accompanying narration, makes it much more compelling. Take the time for it!
And the river is beautiful.