Been listening to Daydream Nation lately. It’s one of those CDs I picked up in the mid-90s (when CDs were still kind of a new thing) that I still listen to, still come back to. Got turned on to them about the same time as I started listening to Swans, another off-kilter punk band of that same era. But while Swans is a defunct band, Sonic Youth is still turning out new albums more than thirty years after getting together.
If there’s one song you’ve heard by Sonic Youth, it’s probably “Bull in the Heather,” from Experimental, Jet Set, Trash and No Star. Here’s Kathleen Hanna and Kim Gordon both looking absolutely adorable.
Punk’s still got legs.
D.
The most interesting aspect of Huffington Post’s story on the near-pithing of bullfighter Julio Aparicio is not the graphic photo of a horn piercing Aparicio’s throat and popping from his mouth like . . . wow, there’s no apt simile for a bull’s horn popping out of someone’s mouth. Go figure. I guess only bull horns pop out of people’s mouths like that. Anyway, the interesting part is the commentary. Not one person defended the sport. Not one. Has Hemingway’s spirit left this society entirely? Or perhaps Hemingway’s aficionados don’t read HuffPo.
A cross-section of the responses:
Revenge, about time.
The doctors are telling him to take his recovery slow, maybe by killing some small dogs first then working his way up to bulls.
He got what he deserved. What’s good for the bull is good for the bullfighter.
Karma truly is a bitch.
Isn’t there some other more constructive way to prove one’s manhood?
Yeah, if the Matador actually “Mounted” the Bull. Now THAT would be MANLY!!!!
The second most interesting thing about this article: Google’s choice of ads.
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As Seen on TV Mouthpiece
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Happy Monday!
D.
Why does Hollywood do nothing but remakes? Or at least that’s how it seems sometimes. In the gym last weekend, I watched nearly all of Ben Stiller’s version of Heartbreak Kid. The original, starring Charles Grodin in the title role and Cybill Shepherd as the girl he meets and falls in love with while on his honeymoon, was an odd gem — I remember not being sure whether to laugh or cringe at Grodin’s sociopathic character. Been a long time since I saw that movie, but I recall it as an oddity: edgy, not a little disturbing. Certainly not rom-com.
The new one is pure rom-com, with only the slightest nod to the original working its way in with the ending “twist” (ZOMG, he’s gonna break another heart!) Other than that, the new version is pure formula, with new love interest Michelle Monaghan being oh-so-perfect (and beautiful, but who wouldn’t be beautiful compared to a baked lobster covered with Noxzema?), throwaway cameos by Carlos Mencia, Daily Show alum Rob Corddry, and Ben’s dad Jerry, and requisite grossness (which seems to be de rigeur ever since Something About Mary) supplied by a folk cure for jellyfish stings.
Broadway is even worse, stealing regularly from books, movies, and itself. Hairspray the musical surprised me, but I’m not holding my breath for Pink Flamingos the musical. But I do reserve dibs for the libretto for The Exorcist the musical. Imagine: possessed Regan in full makeup, head turned 180 degrees, cross brandished, lapsing into song! Oh, I love it already. It’ll be the best thing to hit Broadway since they recycled The Producers.
D.
I’ve been researching tellurium, a precious metal that is not terribly expensive since there aren’t many uses for it. Bismuth is also a rare metal, and also not pricey since you can’t do much with bismuth but make cool crystals with the stuff.
In browsing that site, I discovered something interesting. But let me back up a bit. Let’s say you have a little kid at home and you want to pique her interest in chemistry. What do you do? When Jake was little, I showed him the vinegar and baking soda reaction, I demonstrated electrolysis using copper wire and a dry cell battery, and I showed him how to do paper chromatography. Didn’t pique his interest in chemistry, but it wasn’t for want of me trying. Turns out you can find all kinds of sites on the web like this one, which features great experiments to do in your home.
Amazing Rust is not one of those sites. It’s Ask Mr. Wizard for the budding Timothy McVeigh crowd. It’s the one-stop school science fair idea-source for next year’s Darwin Awards winners. I mean, for the love of Hephaestus, they brag about staging large-scale thermite reactions.
But this is the project that really got my juices flowing:
The object of this experiment is to liquefy chlorine gas. After a brief preamble about the brilliance of Michael Faraday in figuring out how to isolate liquid chlorine by cooling and pressurizing it, they include the necessary “kids, don’t do this at home” message, to wit,
Chlorine is toxic and can cause severe respiratory damage and, if inhaled in sufficient quantities, even death. Take great care to avoid breathing chlorine gas. In case of inhalation, retreat to an area with fresh air immediately. Consult the MSDS, and other reliable sources, to determine the appropriate medical attention required for various levels and paths of exposure to dangerous substances.
Chlorine gas, and liquid chlorine, are highly corrosive and may act as an oxidizing agent to many organic and metallic materials.
Dry ice and especially liquids cooled using dry ice pose a significant safety risk. Do not allow these substances to touch living tissue (for example, skin) for any significant period of time as they will quickly cool the tissue to dangerously low temperatures and can result in frostbite. Always handle with thermally-insulting, non-absorbent gloves.
A list of applicable MSDS pages are provided in the ‘external links’ section on the left.
Only experienced persons possessing the proper equipment and who are knowledgeable of the material’s properties and the recommended safety procedures should attempt this experiment. It is only advisable to perform this experiment inside a well-maintained fume hood or glove box in order to protect oneself from the corrosive and toxic effects of liquid and gaseous chlorine. The danger may be further minimized by only producing chlorine gas, and thus liquid chlorine, in small quantities. Proceed with Extreme Caution and at One’s Own risk.
Ah, but then on to the fun stuff. Here’s the basic idea: produce chlorine on the left, cool it in a dry ice bath on the right. How do you produce chlorine? The tried and true method known briefly to scores of hapless janitors and house-cleaners: mix a bleach with an acid. In this case, calcium hypochlorite and hydrochloric acid. Et voila, you’re producing gas! In a closed system! Such that the only thing standing between you and a massive chlorine gas spill is the integrity of your ground glass joints!
But it’s the little bubbler in the middle that really tickled me. It’s what the chemical engineers call a scrubber (if I remember correctly. Kira, you want to chime in?) The website explains that hydrochloric acid is laden with water, so the chlorine gas generated is also saturated with water. By bubbling the chlorine and water vapor through the scrubber, you remove the water, purifying your product.
What’s in the scrubber? What would be one of the worst things to add to this toxic gas bomb waiting to happen? Oh, concentrated sulfuric acid, that’s all.
Okay, I’m off now to read about how to make thermite, because you know, holocaust by lung-eating gas is simply not as dramatic as death by raging inferno.
D.
Y’all know I’m not a prude. It’s not like I object to sex education in the schools; in fact, I think we need much more of it, delivered to much younger children. I’ve long thought of sex ed in the schools as a good thing. But I’m starting to rethink my position.
Perhaps the responsibility for sex education should remain with the parents.
The reason for my change of heart? I object to the manner in which my son is being educated. Do you want to know one of the first things they did with the kids? (A mixed class, by the way — whatever happened to separating the boys from the girls? Am I hopelessly square?) They showed them pictures of genitalia. Diseased genitalia.
Mind you, they did not first show them pictures of healthy genitalia.
Do you understand why I’m tweaked? Some of these kids — yeah, precious few, I know, since most kids find porn on the internet about 30 seconds after they first learn to google — but some of these kids have never seen opposite-sex genitalia before, or perhaps just artistically rendered nudity, not full-on wide-open or hanging-out-there packages. And what do they see? Warts. Ulcers. Purulent discharge.
And so for the few ninth graders left who are still mouldable, their first impression will be Ooooh! Grooooss!
I’m likely underestimating the power of sexuality to overcome the Catholic school’s ham-handed attempt to forever make sex = oh gross in the minds of these kids. But still, it bugs the crap at me that they’re trying to indoctrinate my son. Not that he succumbs easily to memes, but just the same, I’ve pointed out to him what’s going on here. Several times. Such that he’s sick of me mentioning it.
I haven’t tried to counter the propaganda with the “sex is beautiful” talk. I embarrass him enough as it is.
D.
As much as I love the nudes that Dean posts, something else nails me in the heart with far greater impact: a woman in a white cotton dress walking into the sun. Holding a bag of groceries, too, as it happens, but the groceries aren’t essential. Essential is the nudity that is not nudity, just enough information to let you dream. Still photos would not capture this beauty, because its intrinsic power derives from a body in motion.
Which is probably why I prefer to work out behind a woman exercising on a treadmill or elliptical trainer. Preferably one whose sweats are slipping down, revealing finely furred skin, a tattoo, or if I’m lucky, a pair of dimples or the hint of gluteal cleft. Yes, that’s medicalese for butt crack. I like butt crack. So sue me.
We all have to do what we can to stay motivated.
D.
This is just so perfect. And to think, used to be I didn’t like Lewis Black. But the man is brilliant.
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
Back in Black – Glenn Beck’s Nazi Tourette’s | ||||
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D.
Is it a full moon? It must be a full moon.
Two white-haired guys in the locker room: one in his 70s, buck naked, drying himself off from the shower, the other in his sixties, neatly dressed, trying to make his escape.
Naked guy: The politics in this country, I just don’t know.
Escapee: It’s always been crazy.
Naked guy: No, you don’t understand. It’s just this century* people got greedy. Time past — what, for 19,000 years? — all people cared about was getting enough to eat. Now they care about cars.
Escapee: Well, no, it’s just the same. They’d fight about getting two hunks of meat instead of one, that’s all. People are the same.
Naked guy: It’s all different now.
And to emphasize his point, I shit you not, he grabbed his package and gestured with it. Whereupon the escapee made good on his escape.
At the treadmills, two women, friends I guess (but you should have heard the one bitch out the other for being late to the gym), no descriptions tendered because when people are living caricatures, accurate description would seem cartoonish. Call them woman one and woman two.
One: Do you know what my Message from God** was today?
Two: Your huh?
One: My Message from God. Check out my MySpace. My Message from God was, “Change comes [and here she paused for dramatic effect. Or maybe to catch her breath] whether you want it or not.” I tell ya, it’s amazing. Almost every day, my Message from God speaks to me. It’s where I’m at nearly every time.
Two: Well why shouldn’t God use MySpace to talk to you? God can use anything.
(Personally, I would opt for the burning bush or wrestler-angel. Much less ambiguity than a social networking app, don’t you think?)
One: Sometimes He uses people to talk to me.
Two: Oh, yeah! All the time!
People these days, I just don’t know. In my day we read horoscopes. (I grab my crotch for emphasis.)
D.
*He seemed oblivious to the fact that our century is a scant ten years old.
** She really did talk in hyperlinks. You could have knocked me over.