drat fink



View current page
...more recent posts

Friday, Jul 26, 2002

rush to judgement

"When AOL bought Time Warner, the New York Times asked me to write a comment piece. "What does it all mean?" my assigning editor asked."

"What I wrote was that AOL's purchase of Time Warner heralded the end of the dotcom bubble. AOL was cashing in its casino chips. And just like the gambler who trades in his coloured plastic disks for real cash, AOL's Steve Case understood that his run was over and that it was time to trade in his stock certificates for those of a company that had genuine assets."

"The New York Times refused to run the piece. They told me I was misreading the landscape to such an extent that for them to publish such a view would be irresponsible. See, all the experts - at least all the experts the Times was listening to - believed that the AOL purchase of Time Warner indicated "new" media's domination of "old" media. Interactivity would take over. Time Warner's only hope of getting in the game was to be absorbed by a new media company."

[link]


imperfect storm

"Dahl's main points form an argument that goes roughly like this. Wise and great though the framers were, their vision was circumscribed by what they knew, what they mistakenly thought they knew, and what they lived too soon to have any way of knowing. Even within those limits, they were hobbled by the political necessities of a particular moment, which forced them to swallow provisions to which the most eminent among them were strongly (and rightly) opposed."

[link]


Wednesday, Jul 24, 2002

golden statement

"In a move toward making San Francisco the first city to defy openly the federal ban on growing marijuana for any reason, the Board of Supervisors approved a ballot measure on Monday that would explore growing marijuana on public property as a way around the Federal Drug Enforcement Administration's continual closing of medical marijuana clubs."

[link]


Tuesday, Jul 23, 2002

rib roast

"More than any other time in history, mankind faces a crossroads. One path leads to despair and utter hopelessness. The other, to total extinction. Let us pray we have the wisdom to choose correctly. -- Woody Allen"

[link]


pop tarts

"Needless to say, the flavor of the Fanta ads is more about borderless fun than the gritty details of the global commerce machine. But in a funny way it was the ads themselves that reminded me, indirectly, of Fanta's origins: The commercials are basically a clever repackaging of almost every youth-marketing trope in recent memory—their leavings, if you will—with plenty of pop culture scraps besides. In the jargon of a pitch meeting, it's a post-ethnic, multinational, transracial, global village, lip-syncing girl band meets prefab boy band, retro-swinger, Austin Powers/Ocean's 11 semi-camp, quasi-kitsch, virtual nostalgia, club remix, neo-urban, alterna-brand, anti-Cola … vibe. Oh, and any of these ingredients may contain some irony—but it's the all-natural kind."

[link]


Monday, Jul 22, 2002

safety first

"The U.S.'s nonlethal-weapons programs are drawing their own fire, mostly from human-rights activists who contend that the technologies being developed will be deployed to suppress dissent and that they defy international weapons treaties. Through public websites, interviews with defense researchers and data obtained in a series of Freedom of Information Act requests filed by watchdog groups, TIME has managed to peer into the Pentagon's multimillion-dollar program and piece together this glimpse of the gentler, though not necessarily kinder, arsenal of tomorrow."

[link]


Sunday, Jul 21, 2002

da do run run

"Remember when Blair, Tootie, Natalie and Jo got into a paint fight? Or how about when Danny Partridge had his tonsils taken out and the family had to replace him for a few gigs? You may not remember all the episodes of your favorite TV shows, but The Rerun Show does - and will reenact them using a talented ensemble cast! Following in the success of The Real Life Brady Bunch stage show, The Rerun Show will steal unforgettable moments from nostalgic shows such as The Facts of Life, The Partridge Family, Differ’nt Strokes, One Day at A Time and more! On "The Rerun Show," classic TV moments come alive again - with a live action twist -- as a talented ensemble cast reenacts episodes from America’s favorite TV shows such as "The Partridge Family," "The Facts of Life" or "Diff’rent Strokes." Much like the popular stage show "The Real Life Brady Bunch," this comedic, half-hour alternative series re-visits the vintage scenes with a new and outrageous slant."

[link]


Monday, Jul 15, 2002

managed economy

"This "talent mind-set" is the new orthodoxy of American management. It is the intellectual justification for why such a high premium is placed on degrees from first-tier business schools, and why the compensation packages for top executives have become so lavish. In the modern corporation, the system is considered only as strong as its stars, and, in the past few years, this message has been preached by consultants and management gurus all over the world. None, however, have spread the word quite so ardently as McKinsey, and, of all its clients, one firm took the talent mind-set closest to heart. It was a company where McKinsey conducted twenty separate projects, where McKinsey's billings topped ten million dollars a year, where a McKinsey director regularly attended board meetings, and where the C.E.O. himself was a former McKinsey partner. The company, of course, was Enron."

[link]


Sunday, Jul 14, 2002

ear rink

gandalf (clip)
fischerspooner
the polyphonic spree
pepito

[link]


gene genie

francis fukayama and robert wright debate the future of cloning at Slate.

[link]