6/23/2005
THX-1138; who do we appreciate?
Saturday, June 25th 2:00 a.m. ET
Sunday, June 26th 9:00 a.m. ET
Be sure to have the popcorn popped and the Sunkist on ice right at kickoff, because you do not want to miss your one and only opportunity to witness an Imperial Stormtrooper chorus line backing William Shatner singing "My Way."
I really shouldn't, but okaaay, here is a sneak peek.
William Shatner: "George, live long and prosper. Eh - live long. You've already prospered enough."
Mark Hamill: "I want to thank you for making me a part of film history...not to mention a Pez dispenser, an electric toothbrush, and a pair of Underoos."
Harrison Ford: "I do love Indiana Jones. And if you guys can dream up more ways to torture me, I'll be there for Indy 4. But George, George, listen! Get on with it, man. If you wait around too much longer, Sean is gonna be much too old to play my father."
Carrie Fisher: "George is a sadist. But like any abused child wearing a metal bikini chained to a giant slug about to die, I keep coming back for more. And amongst your many possessions, you have owned my likeness lo, all these years, so that every time I look in the mirror, I have to send you a check for a couple of bucks."
"You had the unmitigated gall to let that chick - the new girl, the one that plays my mother, Queen Armadillo or whatever her name is - she wears a new hairstyle and outfit every time she walks through a door. I bet she even got to wear a bra, even though you told me I couldn't, because there was no underwear in space."
Mark Hamill: "But most importantly, thanks for showing us - and I mean this so sincerely - that artistic and commercial success and personal integrity need not be mutually exclusive; and indeed, as you've demonstrated, can easily go hand in hand."
Harrison Ford: "The relationships of the characters have stood the test of time. We all stand here, time-tested, for you, George. What a difference you've made in my life. I love you. Congratulations, my friend."
The Man Himself: "I'd like to thank my mom for reminding me that I could do anything. And especially my father, for reminding me to prepare for the possibility that what my mother believed might not come true."
Yay Ray!
Happy Birthday, Ray.
6/12/2005
Outed: Another Real Live Blogger's Story
NCFocus is no longer an anonymous weblog. On Memorial Day, reporter David Mirhadi published my full name in The Union, deliberately, when I had asked him not to - he included NCFocus in a roundup of local blogs, pulling the synopsis and my first name from the blog, then plugging in my last name, which I'd provided in my email to him. I'd thought it was only ethical to provide it there; seems it was also naive.
Anonymous blogger and frequent News & Record blog commenter Anna, of Nevada County, California, has been outed by her own hometown newspaper, the Union.
The newspaper published Anna's full name in a round-up of local blogs, after she had requested, via email, that the reporter not do so. The article's description of Anna's blog came from her Profile, which also states the following:
I've lived in Nevada County for over 15 years, am originally from the Bay Area. My identity is pretty much an open secret - the people I write about know, as I suspect do most of my readers. I'll probably come out of the closet fairly soon; but because Google makes it an irrevocable step...
Anna has posted the relevant documents, including correspondence with the newspaper's editor and the reporter who put the permanent ink to page -- all of which are a must-read for pseudonymous/anonymous bloggers.
Greensboro bloggers may pause right here, look up at their ceilings, and speak a few words of gratitude for the likes of Lex Alexander, John Robinson, and Allen Johnson.
More to come on this story. Chewie is chewing on it.
Meanwhile, here's some advice from Anna on handling a big dis:
Advice for current and future bloggers: when something like this happens to you, it is really, really good to sleep on it before posting. The wisps of smoke now wafting from my ears are nothing like yesterday's jets of fire.
and a nice read for all of us, reporters, bloggers, and civilians alike, on the Art of the Apology.
6/11/2005
Doggie Heaven
6/07/2005
Killdeer, Queen of Gravel
Oh, the awful, wonderful life of the ground-nesting killdeer. Every year about this time, these hardy little chirpers choose a well-trafficked area in the gravel parking lot of my office, and lay a few well-camouflaged eggs.
Mama and Papa take turns on the nest, stalwart through blazing sun, four straight days of rain, and tonight's ferocious thunder and lightning. Though their first parental decision - nesting in an area frequented by 18-wheelers - seems unwise, their vigilance against all threats is remarkable and apparently successful.
When a display of tailfeathers isn't enough to ward off would-be predators, the killdeer breaks out her secret weapon, a triumph of brains over brawn: the broken wing display. Quietly alighting from the nest, the killdeer moves a safe distance away and flops on the ground with one wing bent behind her. Her cries of faux distress fool the average housecat every time, distracting attention from the eggs or hatchlings with the promise of an easy meal. Just as the intruder gets close, "KILLDEE!" she squeals in delight, taking flight on two perfectly healthy wings.
Click here and here for the sights and sounds of the killdeer's nest defense. (If the movies don't play at first, try refreshing the page.)
Human beings can be clever, devoted, and brave, too -- but rather than adapting to our environment, we have adapted the environment to suit us. In the process, we've likely paved over and built on top of some of nature's most invaluable and inspirational lessons in how life is meant to be lived.
I'll do my best to protect this one until it hatches.
6/05/2005
Two Wheels and the Truth
I am one of those people who do months of research before a purchase. I know you hate it, think it dates back to a glitch in my potty training. But I think it's fun. It's part of the joy of spending hard-earned money - for me, not for those around me.
It's also a valuable learning process. Along the way I found out about the history of the bicycle, and the history of mountain biking.
Then one day, in the midst of all this research, I was walking in Battleground Park, and I saw it: the mountain bike I've been searching for all my life.
I'm gonna need a bigger bank account.
6/03/2005
A Galaxy Far, Far Away
Well, wonder no more. Go and see for yourself.
Bonus materials: Astound friends with your knowledge. Wait- you do have friends, don't you? Please tell me you're not like this guy.
Father and Daughter
My father turns 70 today. I've sent cards, presents, and some "Over the Hill" paraphernalia; but thanks to finances and commitments here, I wasn't able to send myself to Florida to celebrate with him. And the Cat's in the Cradle and the silver spoon.
Forgive the melodrama, but my heart breaks at the thought of my father disappointed, and me as the cause. As his only daughter, I should be the one who always comes through. My heart will break again when he tells me gently over the phone that it's okay, he understands, my work is important and he'll see me soon.
It was ever thus. I mess up, fall short, fall down; and my father, a Federal Reserve of compassion, tells me how proud he is of me, how much he loves me, and what a great job he thinks I am doing. Sometimes I turn to him in disbelief, thinking surely he has confused me with someone else. It's then that I see we have the same eyes and the same nose, and I remember that I am named for his dear mother, who I never met.
I make a little game of it, this genetics thing. I treasure every little trait I can find in common with him: a fussy compulsiveness towards neatly labeled folders; a love of barbecued ribs; a logical approach to interpersonal relations that drives my mother up a wall. Awestruck, I realize that my dad is telling me the truth -- he really does love me, and really does think that I'm wonderful. Whatever life holds in store for me, it holds no greater gift than that.
Fathers must surely have no idea the weighty consequence of their every word and action upon their daughters' future well-being. If they knew, I believe they would unanimously refuse the job as too risky, the burden as too heavy. Sometimes they are very deliberate and purposeful about it, and some days they are just living their lives and bumping into you in the hallway. But every day, in every way, fathers are telling their young daughters who they are in the world, how they rank, and what they deserve. These lessons take root so deeply that they are unavailable for future modification, even to the grown woman herself.
When a father leaves a young daughter behind, he creates a crevasse of the heart that she will never be able to fill, and dooms her to a life of trying. When a father treats his daughter as less capable or less important than his sons, he launches executable code for a life of doubt and dependency. When a father, such as my own, tells his daughter she is special, smart, one-of-a-kind, female when it counts and male when it's called for, he is taking the best that one human being has to offer another and secreting it away for her in a trust fund she will never bankrupt.
This is what my father did for me. He did it in thousands of ways. He took me to the rodeo, took me bowling, took me to the hardware store. He took the time to teach me something even when he knew I wouldn't retain it. He let me squish in next to him in his big recliner to watch TV. He told me when I got out of line. He told me I was beautiful and told me I was strong in equal measure. And to this day, when he sees me, his face lights up in a way that any female of any age could tell you was not faked in the least.
My father gave all that he had to the business of being a father. That doesn't mean that he never grumped or complained or was too tired to do something. It means that he was there - is there - and has always made sure that I know it.
I can pick a fight with the whole world, get backed into a corner, and remain unrepentant. When I look behind me, there's this World Trade Center of a man who has my back, ready to step in if I need him. He reminds me that I'm made of steel; tells me I'm worth more than every gem on earth. If they don't understand that, he says, then to hell with them.
I borrow some of his strength for a while, repaired by a visit with wisdom and experience. There's little I go through that he hasn't been through and survived. He's not just willing, but anxious to share it with me. He watches over me for as long as he can, worrying over the air in my tires and how much money is in my wallet, right up until I back out of the driveway or get on the plane.
Emboldened, I fade out of sight again for a while. When I come back - and I always do - he's there waiting, great arms outstretched. He will do this again and again and again and again for me, because I am his daughter, and I belong to him forever.
And -- thank you God -- he is my father.
--------------------------
"Dad!" I screeched. "That's it! From now on, no one is driving this car but me!"
It was more than 30 years into my life on this planet, and I had just succeeded in uttering the bitchiest, brattiest thing I had ever said.
This little disturbance, caused by my father's inability to find the emergency brake release on my new car, is an unfortunate pattern between me and my father. He does something I deem inappropriate or inadequate, and before I know it I am speaking to him in a tone I would not dare use with anyone else on this planet, my mother included.
There was the time my parents and I took an unguided rafting trip down the Tuckaseegee River in western North Carolina. My father is 6'4" and outweighs me by 80-100 pounds, depending on how either of us are doing on our diets. In a raft, this translates to his paddle stroke determining our direction down the river, no matter who is seated in the rear steering position, like me.
No matter how lightly he paddled, he still inadvertently overrode my every steerage from the back of the boat. My saintly mother tried to mediate the bickering from her nonpaddling position in the middle, but it finally got so insane that we had to heave to shore to sort out the command structure.
"This is supposed to be fun!!" I huffed in my father's general direction.
Yes, we fuss, my father and I. Just a few weeks ago we fussed over what percentage of the load should reside in the front half of a U-Haul trailer, and whether electrical or duct tape would be more suitable for corralling said trailer's cables and wires. I fussed at him for lifting heavier objects than I deemed he should, and fussed about his fussing over me working too hard at our yard sale.
"I'm not used to having to check in with people before I do something!" I whined.
"That's the price you pay for being loved," my father replied.
Men, be forewarned that if you raise your daughters as you should, this is what you have to look forward to. They will not acquiesce; they will not take your word for it. They will argue with you, tell you they know things you don't, and test their strength against yours - again and again and again - until you feel that you must have done something wrong to make your daughter think so little of you and hold you in such low esteem. But stop right there, because what you're thinking is wrong.
There's something you should know about your daughter, your sweet little girl, who became a woman in what seemed like a nanosecond. She thinks the world of you. She still needs your approval. She makes a mental note of it every time a theory of hers agrees with one of yours. Don't be fooled by the woman-of-the-world facade. It is only because you did such a good job convincing her that you love her unconditionally that she feels safe, here with you, to test the resolve that she needs back out there in the world.
And when she makes you feel bad, you should know that it makes her feel worse.
It's like that old line you used to use: "this hurts me more than it hurts you." You were right.
My father is now a grandfather. For him and my mother, it is a time of rediscovery, boundless love, and a cherished new role in young lives. They would gladly step off a cliff if they thought it would make a better life for my niece and nephews. My parents, after many years off for good behavior, are back to telling jokes at the dinner table, singing silly songs, dressing up in Halloween costumes, and channeling every bit of energy and attention they have to give to these wondrous creatures who bring such life and love into their home.
I watch the antics of my new and different parents with admiration, puzzlement, and a heartfelt twinge of jealousy. My father now makes going to the store an adventure in fun for a whole new generation of my family. He has a special kinship with them, based on fishing trips and birthday parties that I miss out on.
But most of all, I realize that I am robbing my as-yet nonexistent children of precious minutes with their grandfather and grandmother. I know that one day I will feel that regret as a deep crevasse in my heart. In the meantime, there is nothing to do but share in the joy that four more precious children are experiencing the unconditional love that I enjoy. And even better, that my parents have more adoration and love flowing back to them.
The more people I can recruit in this world to communicate to my parents just how wonderful they are and how worthy, the closer I get to paying it forward.
Happy Birthday, Dad. Your daughter loves you more than she will ever be able to tell you.
6/02/2005
Hit Me
What? I am? Crap.
OK, so the rest of you have a survival instinct I lack. I'm left here - not by myself, but with the saddest, oddest assortment of musical flotsam ever seen on network television:
Balding Loverboy
Aged barfly Tiffany
CeCe Peniston, who looks fine and can still sing, but hasn't changed her name yet...
Arrested Development, who still rock, but whose lyrics ring hollow without youthful anger; and
A Flock of Seagulls, who came down for Bike Week in Daytona in '87 and never left.
And you know what? Everyone is fat.
Trust me, it's not pretty.
Hit me. No seriously. Hit me, and make me change the channel.
UPDATE: I thought I liked Los Lonely Boys' "Heaven" as it was, but Arrested Development just did it better.
But now Tiffany is back onstage with (for some reason I cannot fathom) a tummy-clinging outfit. Dear God -- my retinas... Manager?! Is there a manager in the house??
Idle Brain + Rainy Day = Devil's Workshop
Then, wander over to A Little Urbanity for David Wharton's excellent piece on the same topic: I, Zygote.
Hoggard pointed the way.
Defining Moments
I'm using "fine" in this sense (ALL RIGHT that's fine with me), not this one: (superior in kind, quality, or appearance : EXCELLENT a fine job). From what I understand, that's the type of praise you can expect in a serious newsroom when you do your job.
Several observations:
- History can be very difficult to watch. Take, for example, the images of Christa McAuliffe's parents watching the space shuttle Challenger launch. I don't want to live through that moment with them again.
- The first step CNN can take towards self-healing is to bust Anderson Cooper back down to the minors. Though no heavyweights themselves, Paula Zahn, Aaron Brown, and Larry King should rank among his mentors, not his colleagues.
- They successfully found the high road through much of the material. For example, instead of playing the clip of President Reagan saying, "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall" with music and flag (see my previous post), the narrator simply quoted the President, then got down to the business of detailing the sequence of events, what it felt like to be there, and how CNN was able to cover it (the fall of the Berlin wall, that is.)
- I appreciated the behind the scenes information, like how CNN's San Francisco bureau tapped into the generator powering the Exit signs in order to transmit during the 1989 earthquake. (Though Aaron Brown first said it was the trucks that did the transmitting, through their own gasoline-powered generators. A point of clarification was needed.)
If you didn't catch the show, you can read a synopsis here.
CNN has some nice video up on their site today. Follow the link to Wolf Blitzer's interview with Ted Turner on this page and you'll find it all: Larry King with Bill Clinton, Daryn Kagan with Bono, Aaron Brown with newspaper coverage of Deep Throat today and 30 years ago, and a visit back to Tiananmen Square 1989.
Wolf Blitzer pulled a doozy of an assignment. Here's an excerpt:
Wolf Blitzer: "We finally learn this historic footnote, who is Deep Throat. What does that mean to you?"
Ted Turner: "Not a whole lot, to be honest with you. It happened so long ago, I'm kinda concentrating on things like nuclear weapons, and global climate change, things that affect us now, that's where my emphasis... world peace, a more equitable world. Footnotes to history are interesting, but I don't concentrate on them."
Wolf: "You were always curious about the identity of Deep Throat."
Ted: "I was. That was a long time ago."
Wolf: "Not all news can be, you know, global, and...'
Turner: "I know, I know. News of the Roman Empire would still be good."
Turner says that in the first six months of CNN, the bank called in the loans. At that time their losses were twice as big and their income half as big as projected. He was able to refinance with another lender at twice the rate, and CNN survived.
There are true CNN junkies; superfans. If you go on the Studio Tour in Atlanta, you'll probably have a few in your group. They can hold forth for hours about one on-air personality vs. another, and do a Rainman recall of significant dates. Don't mention the name "O.J." unless you have nowhere else to be that day.
I'm no superfan, but CNN has been my main source for information during some troubling events in the recent past. It's important to me that they remain operational for this mission-critical function. I don't need another loud, antagonistic discussion of current events - I have access to those in spades.
It's like we all live next door to a dysfunctional family. There's yelling, abuse, and the absence of logic day and night -- what we're looking for is a safehouse of respect and introspection among fellow seekers of the truth. Well, that's what I'm looking for, anyway.
We shouldn't be so afraid of looking back. It can remind us of the history we have in common and how much time we waste simply yelling at each other.
A fine job, CNN.