Some kind of celebrity sighting at the corner of Spring and Thompson.
Author Archives: Dan Nguyen
“No Shit” Moment #5812: ABC’s Chris Cuomo
That’s very insightful Chris. Too bad your colleagues didn’t realize that and decided to leave the troll alone. It’s ironic it takes (or would take, he can’t seem to make up his mind) the conscientious objection of the f**king crackpot who started this mess to give the media an excuse to find some other story to cover.
And the anti-Quran-burning advocates also need to give it a bit of a rest. Many of them are the same people who would argue (rightfully, in my opinon) that the vast majority of Islam is composed of moderate, well-meaning and intelligent people, just as is the case for the other world religions. Thinking that Quran burning is ignorant is fine. But throwing up a fit risks a certain condescension, as if you secretly think that Muslims really are a bunch of uncontrollable extremists and that they aren’t yet ready to deal with criticism (just as Christians have had to deal with Piss Christ, for example).
Nonetheless, there are reports of violent protests in Afghanistan about the Quran burning. I don’t blame them. First of all, the protests are happening in Afghanistan, a country that has plenty of non-religious reasons to be angry. Gen. Petraeus is right that any story that fits the mold of American antagonism against Muslims will hurt the mission to win the hearts and minds of Afghans. But so will any story detailing the abuses of, say, Blackwater contractors.
But those kinds of stories are unlikely to get wall-to-wall live coverage from network and cable news or make the covers of 50+ newspapers. Assuming that the average Afghan has just a basic understanding of American media culture, I wouldn’t blame them not being able to tell the difference between our apparent obsession with this Quran-burning pastor and an obsession with Koran-burning itself.
Hacks/Hackers Meetup on Gawker Rooftop, Sept. 8, 2010
From the “Business and Pleasure” mixer for the news geeks group, Hacks/Hackers on the Gawker Media rooftop in Nolita. There was an open bar, but yet the dance floor was empty, which I’m sure was entirely unrelated to the infrequency of Lady GaGa selections by the DJ.
The Tribute in Light, as seen from the Gawker roof:
The Lincoln Center’s Rooftop Lawn at Night
This is where I listened to the Met’s free HD opera screening of Carmen, after two elderly ladies completely took advantage of me and conned me out of a seat I had been sitting in for almost three hours. C’est la vie.
Columbus Circle, viewed from Jazz at Lincoln Center
Questionable Psychic #392: Missing Jacquelyn Kotarac
But this small related detail in the Bakersfield Californian follow-up was absurd enough on its own.
Following the missing person report, the doctor’s family consulted a psychic who couldn’t feel the doctor’s presence, according to Wayne Wallace, a private investigator. He said he was consulted by the family Saturday to look into Kotarac’s disappearance.
I don’t fault the family doing whatever it could out of desperation. But this psychic’s credentials should be reevaluated, if he/she didn’t help in cracking the case. It’s not clear what “couldn’t feel the doctor’s presence” means. Did the psychic rightly detect that Dr. Kotarac was no longer with the living? Or was the psychic just giving an untestable answer, which would cover everything from Kotarac’s death to her taking a spontaneous trip to Malibu or being kidnapped by Bigfoot.
Psychic-patronizing friends of mine tell me that a psychic can’t be bothered with predicting concrete yet unknown facts…or else, why would a good psychic be begging for $2 a palm read when he/she could win the Powerball? It’s about feeling “energy” (even so, it seems that at least some facts should be basic for a psychic to predict: one of my friends had her session recorded, and the psychic asked if she was an only child…something that just about any dolt could divine after a 30-second Q&A of non-direct questions about her childhood).
OK, but if you’re a psychic who can’t detect the “energy” from the sheer horror of someone dying in a chimney (as a result of a fit of jealous love and rage)…what would you say, you do here?
How Researchers Keep Their Bedbugs Alive
The NYT looks at the scientific research side of bedbugs. It’s as gross as you might expect:
The classic bedbug strain that all newly caught bugs are compared against is a colony originally from Fort Dix, N.J., that a researcher kept alive for 30 years by letting it feed on him.
But Stephen A. Kells, a University of Minnesota entomologist, said he “prefers not to play with that risk.â€
He feeds his bugs expired blood-bank blood through parafilm, which he describes as “waxy Saran Wrap.â€
Coby Schal of North Carolina State said he formerly used condoms filled with rabbit blood, but switched to parafilm because his condom budget raised eyebrows with university auditors.
Col. Lawrence Sellin, Ph.D: F*** Powerpoint, Afghanistan edition
Colonel Sellin, who was fired from his post after writing this awesomely frank description of his duties as staff officer at ISAF Joint Command in Afghanistan for UPI. Excerpting doesn’t do it justice, but here are some highlights:
For headquarters staff, war consists largely of the endless tinkering with PowerPoint slides to conform with the idiosyncrasies of cognitively challenged generals in order to spoon-feed them information. Even one tiny flaw in a slide can halt a general’s thought processes as abruptly as a computer system’s blue screen of death.
The ability to brief well is, therefore, a critical skill. It is important to note that skill in briefing resides in how you say it. It doesn’t matter so much what you say or even if you are speaking Klingon.
And then, tragicomedy:
The CUA consists of a series of PowerPoint slides describing the events of the previous 12 hours. Briefers explain each slide by reading from a written statement in a tone not unlike that of a congressman caught in a tryst with an escort. The CUA slides only change when a new commander arrives or the war ends.
The commander’s immediate subordinates, usually one- and two-star generals, listen to the CUA in a semi-comatose state. Each briefer has approximately 1 or 2 minutes to impart either information or misinformation. Usually they don’t do either. Fortunately, none of the information provided makes an indelible impact on any of the generals.
One important task of the IJC is to share information to the ISAF commander, his staff and to all the regional commands. This information is delivered as PowerPoint slides in e-mail at the flow rate of a fire hose. Standard operating procedure is to send everything that you have. Volume is considered the equivalent of quality.
What made the 61-year-old reservist, who served in both current theaters of war, go off the ranch in such a brilliant manner? According to Wired, Sellin tried giving his higher-ups constructive criticism, including “proven organizational methodologies,” but was ignored (even though, Wired notes, he delivered it using a 5-slide PowerPoint). His PowerPoint rant, though, got attention.
Sellin had been opining frequently for UPI; it’s amazing he lasted this long (it may be that PowerPoint and its use in the military has gotten a lot of ridicule lately). Many of his columns complain about operational inefficency and bureaucratic idiocy. On June 24, he wondered if a military mental health test was “just a Pentagon public relations exercise to pretend that ‘something is being done'” and stated that “on face value it appears to be not only a waste of taxpayer’s money but a total waste of time for the deploying soldiers and the CRC staff.” His ripping on PowerPoint started as early as July 15, when he wrote that “command briefings become nothing more than the same updated Power Point slides presenting data about daily operations“
And back in June 15, he gave a impolitic assessment of (presumably) the Obama administration, in comments that make Gen. McChrystal look as obedient as a bootlicking middle-manager:
Far too many in Washington appear to be, not only dangerously out-of-touch with the sentiments and values of the American people but also laughably incompetent in accomplishing anything beyond rhetoric and self-aggrandizement.
Much of our current leadership seem less committed to addressing critical national security issues than pursuing political agendas dedicated solely to the perpetuation of personal power and privilege.
They persist despite the knowledge that their inaction may ultimately weaken the country. It is a degree of selfishness that defies description.
Summer’s Almost Over (Battery Park)
Sigh.
“If you can sleep with it, do it”; New Orleans cops given orders to shoot looters
New evidence and reports showing that New Orleans police were given orders to shoot looters in order to take back the city after Hurricane Katrina, a fundamental change in use-of-force policies. This gives some context to the reports of innocents gunned down during that chaotic time. The story is the result of an investigation by my ProPublica colleagues, Sabrina Shankman and A.C. Thompson, along with reporters at Frontline and the New Orleans Times-Picayune.








