Sep
20
2009

The Michigan State Rant

Over the weekend, the Hawks won (yay!) and are now 3-0 (three more to a bowl game).

USC lost (double yay!) (I really, really hate USC, not because they win a lot, but because they have the absolute worst college football fans that I’ve ever encountered.  And we play OSU almost every year.  USC’s fans are far, far worse.  And good teams can have good fans, in fact, Texas has some of the best fans (outside Iowa) that I’ve ever come across.  Thus, I revel in USC’s misery. And given the number of people I’ve met that share this sentiment, I’m pretty sure you could start a profitable niche business selling vials of the tears of USC fans.  Just saying.)

But what really brought back memories was Michigan State losing to Notre Dame.  Not just losing, but blowing a lead late, and then throwing away (literally, with an interception) the chance to win, or at very least tie, the game.  In short, having the chance to shine, and blowing it.  It reminded me of 2006, and more specifically, of this (specifically the mp3 at the bottom of the post).  As the original post authors so well describe the Michigan State vs Notre Dame game from that year:

And then, there are soul-crushing, ball-busting agonizingly excruciating losses that plunge you through the looking glass into a deep, dark spot in your sportsfan soul that is frightening to even think about. Trust me, I’ve been there before. This week, Sparty was on the receiving end of one of these, and the results… were not so pretty.

You don’t need to remember the game to appreciate it, the audio pretty well describes what happened.  It was far, far worse than this year’s loss. The clip is really funny, and bizarre, and a little painful for loyal sports fans.  It’s also incredibly quotable.

Now, to make clear, I don’t hate Michigan State.  In fact, I don’t even really particularly dislike them.  And I don’t like seeing a Big Ten team lose a non-conference game, nor do I often make the practice of reminding others about when such a thing happens.  After all, when the Big Ten loses, it makes Iowa look bad, and that’s who really matters in the end.  But…. the clip is just so good, and terrible, and great, that it has to be shared.

Oh yeah, probably as NSFW as broadcast radio gets.  Probably best listened to with fellow college football fans, while fairly drunk.

MAKE PLAYS!!!!

Comments (0) | Tags: , , , | Written by on Sep 20,2009 |
Sep
17
2009

Random Artist – Emma Hack

I really like the work of Emma Hack.  So much so that I’m linking to her despite my hate of flash websites.

This is where I would usually post a sample image of her work, so you could get an idea of what it’s like, and decide if you want to spend 10 or 15 minutes browsing her site or just move on.  But, again, flash.

I really like the way that her work plays with things like objectification, perception, etc.  A few favorite collections:

Comments (0) | Tags: , , , | Written by on Sep 17,2009 |
Sep
17
2009

Pet Peeves – I hate flash

I hate websites made in flash.

You can’t link to it.

You can’t really direct people to what you’re talking about.

You can’t make small excerpts to show your readers that it’s actually worth their time to visit.

You can’t bookmark the parts you really like and find them later.

They use a different control structure so they’re harder to use (link aren’t blue and underlined, things generally don’t behave the way you’d expect), showing, in my opinion, that the people who use flash see themselves as more important than their readers/users – i.e. my way is better than what you’ve learned.

It’s not supported on nearly as many platforms, which limits its audience (Flash is one of the few things that still doesn’t work very well on Linux).

It’s a proprietary technology, though that’s a rant for another day.

Search engines can’t search it, which makes it even harder to find it.

Artists and designers are generally the most guilty of using flash for website design, because it does give a very custom feel.  Generally, when I open a site and see that it’s flash, I close it immediately.  There’s a lot of great artists and designers out there that I’d love to share, but won’t because they make it too hard to link to their work.  A lot of great content doesn’t get spread because of a really simple unfortunate design choice.

About the only place where flash is an appropriate design choice: games.  The end.  Nothing that’s not a game should use flash.  Ever.

Comments (3) | Tags: , , , | Written by on Sep 17,2009 |
Sep
17
2009

New series – pet peeves

I’m making an attempt to contain my rant / soap box posts.  I’ve found the I frequently allude to a few of my pet peeves (graffiti, flash web sites, pretension, bad grammar / lack of even basic attempts at proof reading one’s own work, socialists, crappy music videos, etc), but don’t really ever flesh them out.  The main result of this is that I end up with weird mixed posts of “I like this, and I’d like it more it weren’t so <insert pet peeve here>”.  So, in an effort to decouple a specific instance of a pet peeve (someone made a website using flash and I can’t link to their work that I really like), and the broader pet peeve (I hate flash websites), I’m going to try to separate the two out into a rant post telling why I hate flash websites (for example), and a post about the actual site I’m posting in spite of my hate of flash, with a link to the post about why I hate flash.

Not a big change, and we’ll see how well I stick to it, but I thought I’d mention it.

Comments (0) | | Written by on Sep 17,2009 |
Sep
16
2009

Maybe blowing things up isn’t always the best option

45 foot, 8 ton dead whale + 1,000 pounds of dynamite =

I am I odd for thinking, “Why not just drag it back out into the ocean and let nature deal with it?”

Comments (0) | Tags: , , , , | Written by on Sep 16,2009 |
Sep
15
2009

Predicted futures

This list of predictions about the future (now the present) is interesting for the outlandishness of some of it, how a absolutely spot on some of it is, and to think about which would have been which 15 years ago, when the list was made.

Comments (0) | Tags: , | Written by on Sep 15,2009 |
Sep
14
2009

Bad day at the office

From talking to people lately, it seems like nearly everyone feels trapped in their job because of the economy. And it seems like most jobs are involving more and more stress, and cut backs, and expectations, and general unpleasantness, which all get further magnified by feeling like there’s no good way out.  Thought this video might help.  Not that I’m suggesting anything like this, just saying it seems like more and more people can relate:

Not sure how much of that is authentic and how much is staged, but entertaining none the less.

I also wonder when the economy starts to show signs of improvement, how many people will be job hopping, what percentage of workforce turnover most places will see, and how much happier (and most likely, more productive) everyone will be.

Also, did I mention my computer at work today decided to melt down and stop working for me?  Yeah.


Update: I looked around a little bit, and apparently the video is staged – it was for an office supply company of some sort.  Kind of figured with the various camera angles and such, but still rather entertaining.

Comments (0) | Tags: , , , | Written by on Sep 14,2009 |
Sep
12
2009

Johnny Cash – Hurt

Johnny Cash died six years ago today.  I actually remember quite distinctly when he died.  I was driving down Gilbert St in Iowa City in my old beat up car, listening to Rock 108.  If you’re not from Iowa, or not a fan of rock/metal music, Rock 108 is a great rock station that plays absolutely only rock/metal.  If it’s borderline on pop or country or rap, they won’t play it.  Rock only, almost religiously.  Which was why it was particularly odd that when I changed the station to them, a song that was a little bit folk-ish was on.  My first thought was actually that the station must have been sold and got a new format, but as it played, I realized it was a cover of a Nine Inch Nails song.  And not just a cover, but one of the exceedingly rare occasions where the cover absolutely out does the original.  Afterwards the DJ said that the cover was by Johnny Cash, and that he had just died.

As I’ve mentioned before, I hate about 95% of music videos out there, am indifferent to about 4.99%, and only actually like about .01% of them.  Most either seem like they’re whatever semi-novel thing that they could come up with to put on screen so the song could get played on MTV-18 (unless that’s become all reality shows as well and we’re on to MTV-19 now).  I really, really like this one.  It makes the song even better.  It may well be my favorite music video. It was the last video Johnny Cash made before he died.

Comments (0) | Tags: , , | Written by on Sep 12,2009 |
Sep
10
2009

Bicycle Rant

First off, this post has been brewing in my head for a while, so it’s the culmination of a lot of frustration and anger built up over a long time.  Not to mention the combination of lots of not totally related bicycle themed anger.  And it’s long.  Just warning you.

Second, let me tell you about the particular incident that happened today (one of several today in fact), that caused me to finally snap and get around to writing this rant.

On my way home from work, I was driving down 26th St.  If you’re not familiar with Minneapolis, 26th and 28th St are both one ways (going opposite directions) that are 2-3 lanes wide (varies as they go across town) that run from one side of Minneapolis to the other, and are accordingly the fastest way across town most of the time, and generally very busy.  They have stop lights about every 5 block on average, and a speed limit of 30, so most people go 35.  Scene set.

So, driving along 26th, with the 35 mph flow of traffic during rush hour, I notice a girl (okay, woman, probably 20′s-30′s) on her bike coming from my right down one of the side streets that crosses 26th.  There’s a stop sign on the cross street, and 26th doesn’t have a stop.  As this is just a couple blocks past a stop light, there’s a pretty large clump of cars coming down 26th, and I’m the second one back in the right lane.  The bicyclist doesn’t seem to be slowing much, even though she’s approaching a stop sign at a busy street.  I slow down a bit (to probably 30) because I’m an exceedingly cautious driver (not trying to paint myself in a glowing light here, just noting I regularly get made fun of for driving like a grandma).  I assume she’ll either stop somewhat quickly, or just turn and ride on the sidewalk, which I see bikers do all the time along 26th / 28th, because with all the traffic and the speed of traffic, biking on them is kind of nuts.

She does the biker not stop or turn on to the sidewalk, she doesn’t even slow down or look before blowing straight through the stop sign into traffic and half way across the lane in front of me.  Not even a glance.   I slam on the brakes HARD, and swerve into the other lane to avoid killing this girl, without being able to check if there is a car in the other lane first.  I still only manage to miss her by maybe a foot as I go careening, skittering what’s left of the loose gravel into the other lane.  Not only did I come incredibly close to ending up with this girl under my car, I also came within inches (like I’m not totally sure if my rear view mirror of my car touch their trunk lid or not) of clipping the car in the other lane just in front of me.  And when I say brake HARD, I mean pulling up the seal-coating hard.

A good half an hour later now my pulse is starting to approach a normal rate again.

The point I would really like to stress in all of that is that not only did I almost accidentally kill this girl due to her flagrant disregard of her own safety and traffic laws, she didn’t even glance to see if there were cars coming.

Not just that she didn’t slow down and turn her head a little.

No.

She didn’t even look in the general direction of oncoming traffic.  If she had been a half second later, or if I hadn’t slowed down just a little when I noticed her, she would have driven directly into the side of my car without even having seen me coming.  Even with the sound of cars screeching and swerving around her, she never glanced back that the pile up she almost caused.

So, let me now get to the main point of my post: Bikers, I’m trying to not kill you.  Please stop making this such a difficult task.

Now, I realize, like with all things, there may be 1,000 sane, respectful, safe bikers out there for every idiotic jack-ass like this one.  But this is still by no means an isolated incident of idiotic suicidal jack-assery.  I quite frequently see bikes fly through stop signs and cars having to slam on their brakes to not hit them.  Or bikes weaving on and off of the sidewalk to pass people or get around one-ways.  Or just flat out go the wrong way down one-ways.

Just TODAY, prior to this near homicidal experience, not 5 blocks before it in fact, there was a biker going the wrong way down the same one way street.  About two weeks ago I saw someone biking not only the wrong way down that same street, but he was going the wrong way while riding squarely DOWN THE CENTER STRIPE of the one way into a ton of traffic.  Every car slowed down and moved over so the biker could continue going the wrong way down the center of the one way safely (well, as safely as one can do that).

Here’s another one that wouldn’t usually be notable, as it falls more into the rude rather than suicidal category, except that it also happened TODAY.  I was going the other way, down 28th, on the way to work this morning. There was a biker in front of me going 12mph.  Exactly 12 mph.  In a 30.  Okay, it’s a bike, I try to be nice.  Again, I drive like a grandma, minus the perpetual left hand turn signal.  So, I go 11.5 mph for about 3 blocks until there is space to get in the other lane and pass him. I go around him and pull back into the right lane because I have to turn right in a few more blocks.  About a block after I pass him, we reach a stop light that’s red.  There’s five or six cars ahead of me already stopped.  The biker then cuts over into the gutter of the street, and passes all of us, on the right, while we’re stopped at the light.  He then pauses (not stops) at the light and goes through the red light, and pulls back out to take up the whole lane on the other side of the intersection.  So, several cars that were pretty courteous in giving him enough space have to go 12mph for another 5 blocks until they can pass safely again.  But why bother, because he’s just going to do it again at the next light, and every one after that, all the way across town.

Again, not something I would usually blog about, but rude, and something I see a lot.  Beyond that, it was on 28th.  Which is LESS THAN ONE BLOCK from the Midtown Greenway, which parallels 28th.  If you’re not familiar with the Greenway, it’s a dedicated commuter bike path.  It goes all the way across Minneapolis, one side to the other, and then lots more.  It’s bikes and pedestrians only.  It used to be rail road tracks, so it’s dead flat, and almost all the streets it crosses have bridges over it, so you don’t even have to cross streets as you bike.  It’s a bicycle highway.  It even has exit ramps.  Seriously.  Exit ramps.  It is, in short, the perfect place to bike.  Even more so if you’re trying to get across town.  Like you would on 26th / 28th if you were driving.  Which again, is the scene of all of the above.  Which just compounds the stupidity / rudeness of it all.

Now again, let me point out again, I have nothing against bicycling or bicyclist in general.  Overall I’d say it’s a great form of transportation / exercise / recreation.  It’s much better for the environment and communities in general than driving (less parking = less sprawl = less need for cars = less parking …. = more active and personable neighborhoods).  I’ve actually just been learning to bike (though that’s a post for another day).  And I’m fascinated by all the variations of bikes out there and all the modifications and so on.

But, it just seems like bikes bring out the self-righteous jack-ass in so many people.

Another bike related rant/story, while we’re on it.  Once, at a party, I was talking to a guy who is what I would deem a bicycle zealot.  We were discussing commuting to work and I mentioned that I couldn’t ride a bike (hadn’t learned yet), so I took the bus to work.  His response was, and I quote, “you actually ride in those fossil fuel burning behemoths?”  That’s right, I was taking mass transit rather than driving alone, and I was riding in “those fossil fuel burning behemoths.”  He then worked the phase “fossil fuel burning behemoths,” that exact phrasing, into the conversation 6 more times in about 3-4 minutes.  He may have said it more, but after the 6th time in a row with the same phasing and disdainful tone, I had to go refill my beer and remove my teeth from the tight clamp they had formed around my tongue.

Perhaps part of my anger on the subject of bicyclist and their interactions with cars comes from the status of bikes.  As any biking zealot will tell you, bikes aren’t in the way of traffic, they are traffic.  And I couldn’t agree more.  I’m not sure if it was my parents, or my driver’s ed teacher, or just the laws in Iowa, but I always learned that as far as traffic laws go, bikes are cars.  Period.  A car has to signal when it turns.  So does a bike.  When you want to pass a car, you can only do so when there’s a striped center line, and you have to give the other car the whole lane as you pass it.  Same with bikes.  You have to stop at a stop light that’s red, and stay stopped until it turns green, even if there’s no traffic.  Same with bikes.  You can’t drive your car on the sidewalk.  Same with bikes.  You should follow at a distance far enough back so that no matter what stupid thing the person in front of you does, you can stop without hitting them.  Same when following bikes (bearing in mind they can come to a complete stop immediately if they fall over).  You can’t pass on the right, or in intersections.  Same for bikes.  You have to stop at stop signs and wait there if the cross traffic doesn’t have a stop.  Especially if you don’t want to be nearly run over.  With out looking.

This brings me to my secondary point / plea for bicyclists.  If you want to be treated like traffic, act like traffic.  Just like if you want to be treated like an adult, act like an adult.

If you keep jumping from the sidewalk to the street and back as is convenient to you, chances are good people won’t give you much space as they pass.  If you pass people on the right at stop lights, chances are pretty good that people won’t think twice of blowing right past you on the next block and will barely move out of their lane to do so.  And if you act responsibly, you’ll (probably) be treated with more respect.

This is also why I profoundly hate Critical Mass.  The “logic” for which seems to go something along the lines of: “We are traffic, so to prove it, we’ll ride around and violate every traffic law we can think of.  Not to mention we’ll purposely try to piss off the car drivers we would supposedly so like to have share the road with us.”  I also hate that they do this at 5pm, on Fridays, down town.  So, not only are they making drivers hate and loath bikes while reinforcing that bikes have no concern for their own safety and are self-righteous jack-asses, they’re doing it to people who are down town at 5pm on Fridays.  You know who is driving down town at 5pm on Fridays?  People whose live already suck.  They work in cubicals down town for massive faceless corporations, and not only that, they have already had the only great part of the work week (leaving an hour or even a half hour early on Friday) violated because their boss has decided that whatever deadline they were working on was more important than the weekend, happiness, or a social life.  You want to know when they should have Critical Mass?   At 2pm on Tuesdays.  Why?  Because if you’re out driving around at 2pm on a Tuesday your life is awesome already and could use a little evening out.  Plus, you’d probably be more sympathetic to the cause than overworked, burnt out, end of the week corporate slaves.  But I digress.

Not to say for a moment that every car driver is a saint or respectful either.  After all, there are plenty of BMW’s and Volkswagen Jettas on the road to attest to car driver jack-assery as well.  This isn’t meant to be a one sided argument.  We’re all on the road together here. (For Red Green fans, I’m pulling for you.)  And until there are a whole, whole lot more bike lanes than there are now, it’s going to stay that way.

I”m just saying that the more often that people see bikes do stupid, dangerous things when driving near cars, the more likely cars will be to do stupid, dangerous things when driving near bikes.  After all, if bikes (as a generalized whole concept in people’s minds) feel safe passing me one foot away, then they must feel safe if I do the same.  Right?  Again, the give and take of both sides figuring out what’s socially acceptable.

I’m still sticking to my bikes are cars view though.

And again bikers, I’m trying not to kill you.  I nearly wrecked my car today trying not to kill you.  Now would you please stop making it so damn hard?


Bonus side note:  Number of times jack-ass or some derivative was used in this post: 5.  Though counting this note, it’s 6, you fossil fuel burning behemoths.

Comments (0) | Tags: , , , , | Written by on Sep 10,2009 |
Sep
08
2009

A little book store

A charming and wonderfully quirky story about an enormous book store located in rural Wisconsin.  It doesn’t advertise, it’s open one day a week, and probably has more books than Amazon.  More than a little OCD, but quite endearing.

The story starts about a minute in.

Via The Obvious?

Comments (0) | Tags: , | Written by on Sep 08,2009 |

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