Monday, April 26, 2010

Good Samaritan Stabbed, Ignored

"And I am reminded, on this holy day, of the sad story of Kitty Genovese. As you all may remember, a long time ago, almost thirty years ago, this poor soul cried out for help time and time again, but no person answered her calls. Though many saw, no one so much as called the police. They all just watched as Kitty was being stabbed to death in broad daylight. They watched as her assailant walked away. Now, we must all fear evil men. But there is another kind of evil which we must fear most, and that is the indifference of good men."
-The Boondock Saints

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Shuffleboard 9

1. "Down Under" by Colin Hay
The original "Down Under," an Australian folk song by "Men at Work," is a weird, catchy, and apparently anthemic-for-Aussies tune straight out of the 80s. The words are strange, but sum up the easy-going life of Aussies.
This live version by "Men at Work" alum Colin Hay is outstanding. It's recorded at a bar (in Nashville, I think), so he jokes with the audience at the beginning and then plays the song.
The stripped-down man-and-guitar sound combined with the odd and haunting lyrics is eerie, especially with Hay's unique and raspy voice. There's no better recording of it.

2. "634-5789" by Wilson Pickett from In the Midnight Hour and Other Hits
Wilson Pickett is one of the pioneer R&B guys from back when there was more emphasis on what the acronym stood for: Rhythm and Blues.
Pickett was responsible for quite a few classic blues tunes of the 60s on 70s, including "Land of 1000 Dances."
This track is a standard blues/soul offering with Pickett backed by backup singers and a small horn section. The lyrics are forgettable, but catchy. You can definitely see The Blues Brothers doing this number.

3. "Caras Galadhon - Featuring 'Lament for Gandalf'" by Howard Shore, from The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring - Complete Recordings
I think we just set a record for longest song/album title ever.
The Complete Recordings has most of the music from the films, whereas the commonly released soundtrack has selections.
This track is featured while the Fellowship are entering Lothlorien after the disaster in Moria, resulting in the loss of Gandalf. It's sad, mournful, even ominous at times, but still manages to keep it's grand sweeping scale that Shore uses to portray the vastness of Middle-earth.
This video only features a part of the track.

4. "Weary Memory" by Iron and Wine from The Creek Drank The Cradle
When listening to Iron and Wine, you feel like you're on a dusty farm drinking lemonade and listening to overall-wearing bearded guys playing on the porch.
I think one of them does have a beard.
Anyways, just like all other Iron and Wine songs, "Weary Memory" features incredibly tight harmonies, an old guitar, and some slide guitar work too. The lyrics on most Iron and Wine songs are rich, but vary little. They all talk about the hard life in the country, which is maybe why they always sound sleepy.
A very good chill-out tune.

5. "Moody Monday" by Damien Rice from O
I happened upon Irish folk singer Damien Rice quite by accident. I heard one of his songs on an episode of House, wondered aloud who it was, and found that my roommate at the time was a Damien Rice fan. I've been fascinated ever since.
"Moody Monday" is perhaps my least favorite Rice song, almost exclusively due to the odd processing he puts on his voice during the chorus. He weirdly pitches his voice up (think Stitch from Lilo and Stitch) while singing "MOOODaaay, MOooooodaaaay..." It's odd and jarring.
Other than that, the song isn't bad. It features the same heartbreak, depression and desperation that makes Rice so unique and powerful.
Unfortunately, I couldn't find a youtube video of this track, so here's a 30-second sample.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

The Cardinal Sins of Facebook

acebook has become as ubiquitous as Google these days. In fact, if Facebook were it's own country, it'd be the third most populous nation in the world, ahead of the United States and behind India and China.
At the risk of sounding pretentious, I was on Facebook in 2005, the year after it went public (became available to universities outside the Ivy League). I've been able to watch its dizzying ascent to Internet stardom, and at the same time, notice (and possible contribute to) its unwritten set of rules.
As these rules are unwritten, it is easier to point out when they are broken. Thus, The Cardinal Sins of Facebook.

1. Unending Game Requests
When Facebook opened its doors to third-party developers, the Internet itself went crazy. Everyone and their mother's uncle had an app to add. Gaming app developers soon figured out that making users request their friends to complete various in-game tasks equaled a lot more users.
That petered out about a year ago, though. Everyone is now using the apps they want to be using. It has plateaued. Developers are still under the impression that the growth will be exponential, so they haven't tweaked their systems at all. Newbie Facebook users (as well as clueless ones) therefore continue to request you join their mafia, become their farm neighbor, or answer awkwardly personal questions about them. And no amount of begging from you will stop it.
Absolution: If you see a request you don't like, Facebook has gloriously added a "block application" button. Use it liberally.

2. The Baiting Status
I remember a time before Facebook status updates.
Just let that sink in a while.
When statuses went live, Facebook users were all college students. We all experimented with the status function, either updating everyone about every little thing going on in our lives, or just ignoring the feature all together. The usage leveled out to activity updates, newsworthy accomplishments, interesting links, and even the occasional gloating status.
Then Facebook opened its cyberdoors to any and everyone with a email address. Thus, we got a slew of microblogging the day's events, spam ads, and the worst offender of them all, The Baiting Status (aka the Sympathy Fisher).
"really wishes some people would just grow up!"
"feels crappy."
"just wants life to be normal! please!!!!"
The list, unfortunately, goes on forever. These tricky statuses are designed to bait you into asking what's wrong, prompting either a pissed-off "nothing" reply, or a long paragraph you have no intention of reading.
Absolution: DON'T REPLY. If you know the person and are genuinely concerned about them, private message them or call them (and tell them not to post that crap on Facebook anymore).

3. The Copy-and-paste Status
These are the Facebook equivalent of chain letters.
"♥♥♥ put this on your status if you or somebody you know has suffered BABY LOSS ♥♥♥ the majority won't put it on, because unlike cancer baby loss is a taboo ♥♥♥ break the silence ♥♥♥"
I have no idea what that particular status means, but you know what I'm getting at.
When I was "researching" this topic via my own Facebook status, someone said this: "[I hate] copy and paste status updates that guilt you into thinking you don't love your husband, mother, children, sister, God, whatever if you don't paste it as your own."
That pretty much sums it up.
Absolution: If you aren't that friendly with the offender in real life, defriend them and move on. If that would cause unnecessary strife, simply delete them from your News Feed by clicking the "Hide" button next to their name.

4. Old(er) people using internet acronyms from 1998
Seriously guys. Many more people can type quickly these days, foregoing the need for "G2G," "LOL," "AFK," and any number of MSN Messenger-bred acronyms from our middle-school days. The old(er) people on Facebook seemed to have just discovered them, and are therefore using them as liberally as we did back in the day. Shudder.
They're even inventing their own. On one status last week I saw both "PTL" and "WTG" in one status. The first is for "Praise the Lord," and I believe the second is "Way to go."
Really? We need acronyms for that?
Absolution: I dunno, offer to pay for typing lessons for the offender. To prevent yourself from giving in to acronym temptation, just type the same things you would say in person. It usually comes out sounding much more human, and less like a 7th-grader in 1998 on his Gateway computer talking to his friends on MSN.

5. Not realizing the difference between a message and a wall post
While none of my Facebook friends have made this mistake, failbook.com has a large collection of such offenders.
The foremost example is located here, but be forewarned, the language is very, um, private (NSFW).
Facebook (and Internet in general) newbies often complain of "all the stuff." No matter how simplistic and easy Facebook makes their layout, someone is inevitably typing stuff into the wrong box, complaining about changes (see number six), and sending people public posts about private issues.
Absolution: KNOW THE DIFFERENCE. Teach those less fortunate than you.

6. Complaining every time Facebook tweaks its layout
Goodness is this ever an epidemic. Every time Facebook changes its UI, people get in an uproar over "the new facebook." They complain about not knowing where anything is, that it looks stupid, that facebook shouldn't just change without asking people, etc., etc., etc.
Facebook is a company. They own the website. They are allowed to change it as they see fit. I would venture a guess and say that 80% of the changes made are beneficial to users. Whether it's a layout change like moving the notifications to the top of the screen or adding cleaner lines to the New Feed, it seems as if the general public is unhappy. They want things the old way. They want Facebook to never ever change.
If the Internet never changed or upgraded its looks, we'd be browsing News Feeds on something like this:
Absolution: Stop whining. That is all.