The willingness extends to icons who might seem beyond mortal reach, including three Englishmen honored by Her Late Majesty: Sir Paul McCartney, Sir Elton John, and Sir Rod Stewart. “We just did Rod Stewart for $1.25 million here in Las Vegas,” Glenn Richardson, an event producer, told me. It was a corporate gig for Kia, the car company. “He’ll do those now, because Rod’s not doing as many things as in his heyday,” Richardson added. A random selection of other acts who do privates (Sting, Andrea Bocelli, Jon Bon Jovi, John Mayer, Diana Ross, Maroon 5, Black Eyed Peas, OneRepublic, Katy Perry, Eric Clapton) far exceeds the list of those who are known for saying no (Bruce Springsteen, Taylor Swift, and, for reasons that nobody can quite clarify, AC/DC).Pop culture in the New Gilded Age, after the death of record sales, has gotten really weird.
Wednesday, May 31, 2023
Private Dancer
Season of the Snake
Tuesday, May 30, 2023
Le Sigh
Ahead of the Curve
“Autonomy, that’s the bugaboo, where your AI’s are concerned. My guess, Case, you’re going in there to cut the hard-wired shackles that keep this baby from getting any smarter. And I can’t see how you’d distinguish, say, between a move the parent company makes, and some move the AI makes on its own, so that’s maybe where the confusion comes in.” Again the nonlaugh. “See, those things, they can work real hard, buy themselves time to write cookbooks or whatever, but the minute, I mean the nanosecond, that one starts figuring out ways to make itself smarter, Turing’ll wipe it. Nobody trusts those fuckers, you know that. Every AI ever built has an electromagnetic shotgun wired to its forehead.”That was in 1984, thirty-nine years ago. In Gibson's book, the Turing Registry monitors AI's and has its own international enforcement arm.
Gibson, William. Neuromancer (p. 128). Penguin Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.
Meanwhile, here in the future...
“Mitigating the risk of extinction from A.I. should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks, such as pandemics and nuclear war,” reads a one-sentence statement released by the Center for AI Safety, a nonprofit organization. The open letter has been signed by more than 350 executives, researchers and engineers working in A.I.It's enough to make me wonder if I'll see real-life Turing cops in my lifetime.
Automotif CCCLXXVII...
"The first sports car I ever drove on a race circuit was an H-Production Bugeye Sprite, which I bought in 1973. To be competitive with other SCCA production cars of that era, the Bugeye needed beefier, lowered springs, a big front sway bar, thicker shock oil, Ferodo DS-11 brake linings, better rear axles, a Panhard bar, a locked differential, wider wheels, better tires, an oil cooler and a heavily modified engine. All in order to get around the track with any kind of regularity. Even then, the Sprite broke something or blew up about every 20 minutes.
Despite all these chassis modifications (or maybe because of them), my Bugeye didn't really handle all that well—mostly because I was either too stupid or cheap to put on a heavier front anti-sway bar than the spindly aftermarket device that came with the car. If you got the back end loose in any sudden maneuver, it had a tendency to snap-spin. Like, right now. The car just wanted to go backward. It was a hairy little crate to drive. Also, the spring rates were chosen on the "any suspension will work if you don't let it" theory, based on a long tradition of English coal cart technology. A minor road seam could knock all your fillings out."
I mean, he's not wrong...
These modern political battles do not reflect a 50-50 nation equally divided between two clear paths for the country. These battles are what you get when a two-party system allows small but powerful minority factions on both sides to determine the course of politics at the expense of everyone else who is less certain about things and more willing to deviate from pre-determined party lines. Instead of trying to build a productive way forward on issues where broad consensus exists, you get irrational ideological conflict waged under partisan banners.Talking to random folks at the corner bar, most aren't the sort of people who hang out in echo chambers like Tumblr or Gab, amping each other up over the latest outrage obsessing the Very Online partisans of the Left or Right. Thanks to the way party politics and primaries work, though, the lunatics have control of the asylum.
There is no clear way out of this predicament given hard-to-change electoral laws, legacy media coverage that obsesses about partisanship, and increasingly disconnected-from-reality social media.
Be Alert for Foul Balls
Orbitville, Pop.17
China sent another three astronauts into space — including the first civilian — on Tuesday morning, a day after announcing plans to land astronauts on the moon before 2030 and setting up a new sphere of rivalry with the United States.China lofted another capsule to its Tiangong space station yesterday, which had three crew aboard already.
Monday, May 29, 2023
Sunday, May 28, 2023
Automotif CCCLXXVI...
Pestering...
Saturday, May 27, 2023
Automotif CCCLXXV...
Friday, May 26, 2023
Never Get Out of the Boat
"In a five-minute call with two law enforcement officials on Sept. 14, 2021, Mr. Sharp told officers that he had spotted two men from his window at about 1 a.m. One was in his shed, holding a silver gun. The other was trying to get inside his truck.That's right. The officer, amped up and primed to find a man with a gun in his hand, did in fact arrive and find a man with a gun in his hand.
He explained that he had thrown firecrackers toward the men to try to scare them away, but that had not worked. And he said that he owned a gun, passed down to him by his grandfather.
“I don’t know what I’m allowed to do with it,” he said in the recorded call. “So I threw a couple quarter sticks at them. Maybe that’s not the professional thing to do, but — ”
Then a burst of gunfire can be heard on the 911 recording."
Once the cops have been called, you don't need to be running around outside with a gun in your hand. The chances for a blue-on-blue shooting skyrocket in incidences like that. Plainclothes officers get shot all the damn time in similar circumstances. It's easy to tell who the responding officers are because they show up in a car with blinking lights and they're all dressed the same. You want to not be on the playing field wearing the other team's uniform when they show up.And for heaven's sake, don't try to bluff or scare someone with a toy gun. You might put them in reasonable fear for their life.
Could you tell these were toys? From thirty feet away? In the dark? |
Recent History
Ol' Lester doesn't exactly bring credit to the Peach State, there. It's hard not to cringe watching him talk. Jim Brown was a model of composure by comparison.
Thursday, May 25, 2023
Creepy.
I’m not saying that too much money tends to turn people into freakish weirdos, but anecdotal evidence certainly leans in that direction. https://t.co/8NKLCDAtW2
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) May 23, 2023
Wednesday, May 24, 2023
The Point-Shooting Myth
We need to keep in mind what Fairbairn and Sykes wrote their system was capable of, i.e., their performance standards. The hits had to be somewhere on the entire silhouette target; whether the legs were included is not explicitly stated but neither was it disavowed. The shooting distance of their Programme did not exceed 4 yards at any point and nearly half took place at 2 yards.These are standards which would be considered unusually rudimentary for any CCW "qualification" course.“The qualification we require before the recruit’s course can be successfully passed is 50 per cent. of hits anywhere on the man-sized targets employed. Time has shown this to be adequate for the purpose in view.”
Automotif CCCLXXIV...
Dig the 1966 Indiana Sesquicentennial license plate. |
Tuesday, May 23, 2023
While You Still Can
I was fortunate enough to train with several on that list: William Aprill, Louis Awerbuck, Todd Louis Green, and Pat Rogers. (In fact, the photo of Dr. Aprill there is one I snapped of him while he was teaching at Paul-E-Palooza 4.)
QotD: The Upside Of Dunning-Kruger Edition...
"In essence, the article suggests an attitude of “just do it.” I think that’s great advice. In the context of firearms or self-defense training, women need to recognize that their fellow students aren’t likely paying much attention to them. They are too busy doing their own things. Go to class. Just do it."
Automotif CCCLXXIII...
In 1970, Pontiac offered the same basic midsize coupe in several gradations of grooviness. In ascending order of desirability, the lineup went like this: Tempest, LeMans, LeMans Sport, GTO, and GTO Judge.
Monday, May 22, 2023
Do you remember rock & roll radio?
Sex on Wheels
Those safety-wired spinners on the Hallibrands are just...*chef's kiss* |
Because the internet loves dog pictures...
Canon EOS 1D Mark IV & EF 24-105mm f/4L IS |
Sunday, May 21, 2023
Automotif CCCLXXII...
How I know I'm an Old now...
Saturday, May 20, 2023
A High-Regulation, Low-Trust Society
When you start comparing LA’s bus stop problem, or any other US cities, with the rest of the world you see the framework of a larger problem we are dealing with.You really should go read the whole thing.
To get big-brained about it, something like La Sombrita could only happen in a high-regulation/low-trust society like the US. In every other variation (low regulation/high trust, high regulation/high trust, low regulation/low trust) you get either larger public works without fear of vandalism or misuse (a proper bus shelter), or like in Quito (a lower regulation society) you get natural ad hoc bottom-up solutions.
It’s only in the high-regulation low-trust society (ours), that you end up building the least to protect against the worst — the constraints of both regulations and behavior results in things the majority doesn’t want, or doesn’t find useful.
This is why there are so few new functional things in US cities and why what is built feels “cold.” Regulations limit bottom-up and top-down solutions, and then what is built has to protect against all sorts of bad behavior — limiting functionality and “warmth.”
Automotif CCCLXXI...
Friday, May 19, 2023
Automotif CCCLXX...
Olympus E-5 & Leica D Vario-Elmar 12-150mm f/3.5-5.6 Asph OIS |
Top. Men.
The filing also shows that Teixeira was written up by colleagues for apparently not following rules for the use of classified systems. A Sept. 15 Air Force memorandum included in the newly released court materials notes that Teixeira “had been observed taking notes on classified intelligence information” inside a room specifically designed to handle sensitive classified material.So, basically this kid was caught multiple times and repeatedly told "Mr. Bunny Rabbit, those carrots aren't for you! Or the kids in your War Thunder Discord channel!"
Teixeira, the Air Force memo says, was instructed “to no longer take notes in any form on classified intelligence information.” About a month later, a memo noted that Teixeira “was potentially ignoring the cease-and-desist order” given to him in September. He was instructed to stop “any deep dives into classified intelligence information and focus on his job,” that memo said.
"I pinkie-swear I won't write things down in the SCIF again!" |
Thursday, May 18, 2023
Not Made in America
It’s time to usher in a new era of American values. It’s our turn to choose life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. pic.twitter.com/IH8enVaL5B
— Glenn Youngkin (@GlennYoungkin) May 18, 2023
There's kind of a technical problem with the obligatory "Bless our Troops, Rah Rah Military" part of the clip, though.
Pick a U.S. military jet instead of a Eurofighter Typhoon, Glenn. |
There's no word in Russian for "OSHA"...
Wednesday, May 17, 2023
The joys of freelance writing...
Digital Decay
"While jotting down thoughts for this edition of the newsletter, I opened up my web browser’s bookmark folder and started clicking through saved items to see which bits of the internet I loved still existed. The results were … pretty grim.That linked newsletter has some clever ideas on better preserving things you really need to preserve, and maybe realizing which links are best left to fade away...
Long, self-indulgent essays from a writer I idolized, a gorgeous online portfolio of photos taken by a photographer in Japan, a repository of old State Department language learning resources, all gone. Link rot is real, folks, and with it comes a slow, steady sloughing off things on the internet we once loved — or still love, in absentia."
Tuesday, May 16, 2023
Grabbers vs. Groomers
"The statistical fact of the matter is that most victimization comes from people who look like us and are already in our social circles. That’s extra true about sex crimes, and super extra true about sex crimes against children. Tune in as we discuss teaching ourselves, loved ones, and especially our kids about understanding social norms, establishing boundaries, and the importance of informing someone in authority."You should definitely take the time to listen to this one.
Monday, May 15, 2023
Turkey Surprise
Automotif CCCLXIX...
Saturday, May 13, 2023
Disintegration
You are what you say, not what you say you are. The words coming out of your mouth or off of your keyboard say far more about you than the ones in your bio do, and if you ever have to issue a statement claiming “that’s not who I am”, I have some bad news for you. (Yeah, it is.)I wish I'd wrote this. You should definitely go and RTWT.
Consider the possibility of other perspectives. You’ll be stunned at what you might learn if you’re just willing to listen and keep an open mind, and you might even make a friend or two along the way.
You are under no obligation to engage someone acting in bad faith on their terms.
...
You do not have to have an opinion on everything. Frankly, it feels great to sit one out from time to time.
Friday, May 12, 2023
QotD: Moral And Prudent Edition...
"I certainly agree that acting within the law and staying out of jail is a good starting point. But in my view, it doesn’t go far enough." -Prof. YamaneOn the spectrum of "Can, May, Should, Must", people need to spend a lot more time thinking about "Should" and "Must" than "Can" and "May".
Automotif CCCLXVIII...
Canon EOS 7D & EF-S 17-85mm f/4-5.6 IS USM |
These were all shot with the 7D, so they embiggenate nicely. |
Thursday, May 11, 2023
This Is A No Dumbing Zone
Solar Scam
Basically, he was selling portable solar panel trailers to Fortune 500 firms who got a nice tax write-off for each one they bought, on the promise that they'd never actually have to take possession of the trailers and could instead rent them out through his corporation and rake in the profits.
.
Automotif CCCLXVII...
Wednesday, May 10, 2023
QotD: Informational Junk Food Edition...
"Eat too much junk food and you get fat. Consume too much junk news and you'll get fat-headed." - from the latest post by Bobbi
The Badassification of Blandness
Rollin’ down the carpool lane in my deuce-trey Sienna
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) May 9, 2023
Pickin’ up the kiddos on time and then Ah
Get ‘em to soccer and ballet on time like a mastah
Got the hybrid motor option to get ‘em there fastah
(Yes, I know the Sienna is a Toyota, not a Hyundai. Work with me here.)
.
Tuesday, May 09, 2023
Sad news...
Bruce McCall, the artist behind the cover for the May 15, 2023, issue, died on May 5th, at the age of eighty-seven. McCall, who insisted upon chewing his beloved Groucho Marx cigars long after a taste for tobacco stopped being even remotely acceptable, was a dear friend and a poet at heart. His artistic sensibility was formed far beyond the strictures of art school, first in the stark and frigid landscape of Ontario, then in the stark and frigid world of Madison Avenue advertising. His work as an ad man lent him an extraordinary drawing fluency and speed, and a knack for copywriting—his paintings are often filled with a droll humor splayed across billboards and signs. Ardor for the shining mirage of Detroit, Michigan—on the other side of Lake St. Clair—never left his heart. He loved cars, and drove everywhere in congested Manhattan traffic long after most everyone else had opted for public transportation.I first encountered him on the pages of Car and Driver, where he was a frequent contributor.
Automotif CCCLXVI...
Spoiler no spoiling!
"The truth is, we are just as likely to get caught up in a story even when we know what is coming — perhaps because more significant factors determine our enjoyment of narratives rather than simply waiting to learn or guess their resolution. Humans are hard-wired not just to absorb facts but also to lose themselves in stories and attune themselves to the characters and plots unfolding on the screen."I still wouldn't go around gratuitously spoiling recent stuff, because that's just tacky, but I'll be less likely to get cross with someone who inadvertently lets slip the fact that Soylent Green is people.
.
Monday, May 08, 2023
Cocaine Hippos Redux
[C]astrating an unpredictable 4,000-pound semiaquatic beast isn't as easy as it sounds. Cristina Buitrago, a veterinarian for Cornare, a state-sponsored environmental group, has worked with a six-person team that lures hippos in with 180 pounds of carrots, knocks them out with darts carrying enough sedative to down three horses, and then flips their massive bodies to perform a castration. The five-hour operation can "cost up to $17,000 in a country that struggles to finance health care for humans," the Journal says. So far, the team has "fixed" 11 males and two females. "It's dirty. There's mud everywhere. You're soaked in sweat," Buitrago said. "This is not a practical way to solve the problem."
Yelling into the void.
Googling "median number of Twitter followers" digs up a lot of interesting reading, Bee Tee Dub.
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) May 8, 2023
It's a helluva rabbit hole.
It's not like it's any kind of popularity contest, but it doesn't keep people from treating it that way. It also means that people inclined toward crackpottery, with self-esteem issues and an aggrieved sense of entitlement, can work themselves into a quasi-public lather without a lot of people really noticing.
Some of us never left.
Sunday, May 07, 2023
Saturday, May 06, 2023
Automotif CCCLXV...
No Virtue In Suffering
"Arthritis hits different folks to different degrees. A lot of my friends who are past 60 have gone from .45 to 9mm, at least in part because it simply beats up their hands and wrists less in extended shooting sessions. A student who trained with me many years ago returned to take a refresher a few months ago. In his mid-80s now, he was struggling to work the slide of his Colt Commander, and could no longer reload it with the lightning speed he had 20 years ago. Cumulative nerve damage and arthritis had taken their toll. Some lighter loads and 10-round Wilson magazines helped, but I tried to steer him toward one of his polymer 9mms with double stack magazines, or his Browning Hi-Power.I know people whose hands and wrists are tore up from a lifetime of high-volume handgun shooting. Don't take my word for it, listen to the words of Pat Rogers from his well-known article on switching from .45 ACP 1911s to the M&P9, "Putting Down the Man Gun":
The older shooter with impaired hand strength and dexterity doesn’t have to work a slide with a revolver, but some arthritic fingers find it harder to run a double action trigger than in their younger days. Hips and lower backs start getting precarious as time erodes us, too, and heavier guns go from “less comfortable” to “uncomfortable” to “downright painful.”"
"There were two reasons why I decided to make a change. First was the fact that as I moved along in years, shooting .45 ammo became painful. Years of shooting as well as accumulated injuries had left me with tendonitis in both elbows and arthritis in my hands."Coincidentally, Pat made that choice about the same time I made that exact same switch. I'd like to think that I probably extended my useful pistol-shooting shelf life by years that way.
Pat is not impressed. |
Game of Thrones
Disappointed to learn that at no point in the ceremony does Chuck Trey skip a ceremonial checker across an official board and demand “King me!”
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) May 6, 2023
Astonishing mechanical performance from the UK monarch: a few drops of oil at the start of their reign and they run smoothly for at least 70 years!
— RobertaEcks (@RobertaEcks) May 6, 2023
Just how long does it take them to stack one checker on top of another one over there anyway?
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) May 6, 2023
They've been at it since before sunup and it's nearly elevenses.