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Monthly Archives: February 2013

Four Small Films Not to Miss

28 Thursday Feb 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

"56 Up", "Happy People", "NO", "The Gatekeepers"

First, I’ve updated my list of 2012 films which I rated with four, four and a half, and five stars. There are 40 of them, and while I might adjust a few up or down a star or half star, I’ll stick with what I rated them when I saw them.

Below, are four more films I’ve seen recently and think are worthy of your consideration:

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“It Doesn’t Have To Be This Way”

21 Thursday Feb 2013

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

"Captive Audience", Bill Moyers, Digital Divide, Susan Crawford

I’ve just finished Susan Crawford’s Captive Audience:The Telecom Industry and Monopoly Power in the New Gilded Age, a recently published book that explains in clear language how telecommunications has become the new monopoly and why we are paying more for our connections to the Internet and getting less than people in other countries.

Susan, currently a professor at NY’s Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and a former member of the Obama administration, argues that like electricity, water, and other utilities, Internet access has become a necessity for all of us.

However, similar to our history with previous monopolies, a few companies now have gained control of this ‘new utility’, and unless we understand what is happening and do something about it, we will continue to have a Digital Divide in this country, we will continue to fall behind other nations in our high speed connectivity, and we will continue to pay a high price for our use of the Internet.

It does not have to be this way, Susan believes. In this short NY Times article in January, she wrote about what we could do to reverse this direction.

In her recent 25 minute interview with Bill Moyers, see above, Susan expands on her Times article and covers a number of the issues about which she writes in her book. Basically, she tells Moyers:

The Need: All Americans need a fast, cheap connection to the Internet.

Even though our country invented the Internet, we are quickly falling behind other countries in the delivery of access to the Internet. In a time when connectivity is becoming essential in all aspects of our lives, there is a growing Digital Divide between those with access and those without. Those of us who do have that access (generally in larger, urban areas) are paying high rates and those who cannot pay or live in places where it is not available are unable to connect to the Internet.

The Problem: A few companies control access in America, and it’s not in their interest to bring that fast, cheap access to us all.

Basically four companies, Comcast & Time/Warner (on the cable side) and Verizon & At&T (on the wireless side) have non-compete agreements resulting in lack of competition and therefore high prices. Our government officials have participated in allowing this situation to occur.

 

For those of you who want to delve more into this issue, Captive Audience is worthy of your time.

Although I initially started to read the book because of a friendship with Susan, I quickly found myself captured by the book. She tells us specifically how we have arrived at the place where America now has the worst of two worlds in our telecommunications, no competition and no regulation.

Lucky are the students who have Susan as a teacher.

And we would all be wise to listen to what she has to tell us.

 

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Obama – “Transparency President No More”

16 Saturday Feb 2013

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

John Wonderlich, President Obama, The Sunlight Foundation, Transparency

Most readers of this website probably know I have long been a supporter of Barack Obama and even recently spent five days in Ohio working for his reelection.

Also, many of you know that my wife Ellen Miller has worked for years on the issue of money and politics and is currently the Director of The Sunlight Foundation, an organization she co-founded seven years ago to focus, among other things, on the issue of transparency in government.

So with those two acknowledgements, I link to a blog post by the policy director of Sunlight, John Wonderlich, where in he has come to believe President Obama is clearly now part of the problem of money and politics and cannot be taken as someone who can help clean up the system, something Obama promised to do when he ran for the presidency in 2008. If I remember correctly, he promised to have the most transparent administration ever.

Now, John says, “It’s time to stop worrying about how President Obama can help fix the system of campaign finance and instead worry about how we can fix what he has created.”

See the details of why John has come to this conclusion and why he now blames Pres. Obama for contributing to the problem in this short post, Transparency President No More.

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The Older I Get, The Less I Seem to Know

12 Tuesday Feb 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures, Family and Friends

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

"Gumbo Tales", New Orleans. Gumbo

The older I get, the less I seem to know.

For example:

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Why Is Baseball So Much Better Than Football?

08 Friday Feb 2013

Posted by Richard in Go Sox

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

baseball, Football, Frank Deford, Tom Boswell

This question is a no brainer, of course.

But a friend recently gifted me an original of a January 18, 1987 Washington Post article by my sports’ writing diety, Thomas Boswell, on this very subject. I don’t remember having seen this particular article and thought I’d pass it along.

“Let Me Count the Ways,” Boswell wrote more than a quarter of a century ago, and then continued:

Some people say football’s the best game in America. Others say baseball.

Some people are really dumb.

Some people say all this is just a matter of taste. Others know better.

Some people can’t wait for next Sunday’s Super Bowl. Others wonder why.

Pro football is a great game. Compared to hockey. After all, you’ve gotta do something when the wind chill is zero and your curveball won’t break. But let’s not be silly. Compare the games? It’s a one-sided laugher. Here are the first 99 reasons why baseball is better than football. (More after lunch).

Now the list of his first 99 reasons.

My favorites are: 11 (especially if you add that Weaver was once thrown out of a game before the game even started), 21, 25, 54, 60, 64, 69, 70, 72, 91. And those don’t include the ones Boswell must have listed after lunch.

Which ones are your favorites? (List them in the Comment section below.)

Or even better, list your own reasons why Boswell is correct.

And while I’ve never claimed MillersTime is either fair or balanced (as far as my views on baseball are concerned), you can see this lame list of 25 Reasons Football Is Better. (Some of these seem to make Boswell’s case even stronger.)

Finally, Frank Deford, someone I had also held in high esteem in the world of sports’ writing, at least until I came across this article, sees it differently.

What say you?

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Even Better – “Live Action”

07 Thursday Feb 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

"Asad", "Buzkashi Boys", "Curfew", "Death of a Shadow", "Henry", Best Live Action Short Films, Oscars

The Oscar Nominated Short Films 2013 Live Action *****

If you don’t have two and a half hours to spend in a movie theater to see the five short documentaries nominated for an Oscar (yesterday’s post-Wrong Again), how about an hour and fifty-four minutes?

That will get you the five nominees for the Best Short Films, Live Action, and they are every bit as good as the documentaries.

Maybe even better (said by someone who thinks he likes nonfiction better than fiction).

As I ‘promised’, I spent yesterday afternoon seeing the Short Films, Live Action. Here’s my ‘take’.

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Wrong Again

06 Wednesday Feb 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

"Inocente", "King's Point", "Mondays at Racine", "Open Heart", "Redemption", "The Best Documenary Short Subjects", 2013 Oscars

I spent three and a half hours the other day in a movie theater, watching the five Oscar nominees for The Best Documentary Short Subjects *****.

And learning I was wrong again.

Generally, my movie tastes favor full-length documentaries (and foreign films), just as my preferences in reading favor nonfiction over fiction.

I tend to stay away from short stories and short films, in part because my memory loses those faster than it does the longer ones.

But Ellen was away, I’d finished my second book of the week, the grandkids were otherwise occupied, and I thought maybe I could stretch myself (as in trying something new). Also, I’ve always wondered why the Oscars waste my time on the awards for these short films. Maybe I was being ‘shortsighted’?

Now I know what I’ve been missing.

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Young Boys Beware

05 Tuesday Feb 2013

Posted by Richard in Family and Friends

≈ 1 Comment

mail.google.com

mail.google.com1

My daughter Annie sent me these pictures the other day of her two-year old’s first haircut.

I was reminded of something I thought, and probably said, years ago as I was observing one of my own daughters at a comparable age:

“Somewhere out there a little boy is out running around, maybe playing soccer or reading a book, and has no idea what is in store for him in about 20 years.”

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2013 MillersTime Baseball Contests

05 Tuesday Feb 2013

Posted by Richard in Go Sox

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

baseball, Baseball Contests, MillersTime Baseball Contests

(Workers on Tuesday are loading a truck with the Red Sox’ gear for spring training. Marie Torto photo)

2013 MillersTime Baseball Contests

A few changes for this year’s contests in response to some readers’ suggestions.

Primarily, I have de-emphasized the Sox and Yankees (only one contest involves these two teams), and I have tried to allow for your specific interest in a favorite team, a favorite player, and/or your baseball knowledge (or lack of it also) in general.

Contest #1:

Make a prediction about the 2013 MLB baseball season.

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