Wednesday, February 25, 2004

Drugs from Canada as a campaign issue?

It's curious to note that there's a bipartisan effort currently underway to block Bush's nominee for Medicare chief, over the government's refusal to allow Americans to import prescription medicines from Canada.

It makes me wonder if in the coming months, the Bush administration will soften its stance, then claim that the resulting "change" is an "improvement" for Medicare recipients, even though they were the ones who continued the rules in the first place.

Tuesday, February 24, 2004

Just a thought

The slow movement of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony and the finale of Bach's Matthäuspassion should not be used in commercials for nutrition bars, OK?

Monday, February 23, 2004

Forced ambidexterity and my poor neglected blog

Hmm . . . It's been a while since I posted in here, but it's not so much out of neglect as out of necessity.

About two weeks ago, we had a nice episode of black ice around here. Somehow I managed to navigate it just fine the entire night. But then, about fifty feet from my front door, I hit a patch of it, and start flailing like mad to prevent myself from doing a gainer into the puddles and ice on the ground. Somehow it works, but I end up wrenching my right arm in a direction it's not really meant to go. So, doing things with my right hand have been somewhat difficult as of late, although it's definitely improving. [Typing was a problem right afterwards; it's more or less not a problem now. Which is good, considering I have a thesis to finish up in the next few weeks.]

In other ways, it's been interesting the last few weeks, since it means I've needed to rely on my left hand for things like opening locks, opening bottles, making the bed, and all those other little daily things we do with our dominant hand (or with both hands). It makes me realize I've been taking many things for granted.

As for the blog, there's a lot that I want to say, but just haven't had the time to deal with yet. I'll post more on that in the coming week or two.

Monday, February 16, 2004

Details-oriented

While watching Spielberg's Taken, one of the more unfortunate facts of life is that two of the characters--two of the less savory ones--attended Yale. What freaked me out was not that they were Yale attendees, but that the producers of the series had done enough research to know about the freshman "Perspectives on Science" course.

Thursday, February 05, 2004

Singing both ways

Good God--and people wonder why I hesitate when I'm asked what part I sing.

Consider this. In the span of about three weeks, I've been placed as a Tenor II who should move up in a three-way split, and as a Bass I who should move down in a three-way split. As a result, I'm being asked to sing either tons of high B-flats or tons of low E-flats.

What's worse is that the tessituras (where you spend the most time, not just the extreme notes) don't overlap at all. The tenor tessitura (in the pieces I'm singing) is about G below middle C to E above; the bass pieces are more like low B flat to F sharp. It's really confusing me--particularly because my solo repertoire cuts right in between the two.

Tuesday, February 03, 2004

Super Bowl post-mortem

Where to begin?

  • This was quite possibly the most nerve-wracking four hours of sports I've ever seen. This was even worse than that other playoff game back in October, because at least with that one I gave up hope when Pedro came back for the eighth inning--it was over, it was just a question of how it was going to happen. Last night, I didn't know what was going to happen.
  • Of course, I made an aside to the host of the party last night when things started getting close: "Remember? That's the way it happened last time. The other team came back, and then [the Patriots] won it in the final seconds." I had no idea how accurate the analogy would be. Creepy.
  • At one point near the end of the first quarter, the Panthers had a total of -2 yards of offense. Total. On more than one drive. You might almost argue that the tournament wasn't won late, it was lost early.
  • On the other hand, one can also make the case that the referees in this game were as meddling as the Supreme Court in 2000. Others may feel that the calls were excessively tilted towards the Patriots, but after the Fauria touchdown was ruled out of bounds, our gang was fully expecting the referee to announce on a first-down play: "The receiver was in possession of the ball as he ran out of bounds past the first-down marker. Turnover on downs."
  • After all the calls that weren't made, picking on Troy Brown for offensive pass interference on the final drive seems more than a bit tacky, doesn't it.
  • People may not have tuned in for interviews following the game, so they may not know that the Patriots left the four seconds on the clock after the Vinatieri field goal by accident. It wasn't to give themselves a safety margin should something go wrong; Belichick admitted that they should have waited for a few extra seconds, and they just panicked a bit.
  • One wonders how the game would have gone if Vinatieri had managed to stake the Patriots to a 6-0 lead earlier. Would he have lived up to his "Mr. Clutch" billing? Or would he not even have needed to pull off the same trick twice?
  • One of the more memorable lines in The Sports Guy's coverage of the previous win went along the lines of: "Vinatieri gets free drinks until he's six feet under." Following this, does this mean even after he's under, Patriots fans should spill one "for their homey?"
  • Somebody has compared the Patriots to offensive and defensive machines with interchangeable parts. After seeing the 1-yard touchdown pass to Mike Vrabel, all we need now to have seen everything is David Givens, Troy Brown, or one of the other Patriots wide receivers to return an interception for a touchdown.
  • One-yard touchdown pass to Mike Vrabel? Are you kidding me?
  • Who would have thought that the end-of-quarter scores would be 0-0, 14-10, 14-10, and 32-29? Or that it could have been 38-33?
  • More frightening coincidences: twice the Super Bowl has been held in February; twice the Patriots have won it. All I have to say--let's have it in February 2005, too.
  • "Stupid voiceover." Easily the coolest commercial of the year. It's easily in the same league as the NFL's commercials featuring their smart-aleck announcer, or the ESPN SportsCenter commercial series. Most of the others were kind of "eh," with the possible exceptions of the Pepsi bikini wax commercial and the Visa Olympics commercial.
  • Yep, there really was a one-yard touchdown pass to a linebacker playing on the offense. Just checking to make sure I hadn't gone completely crazy.
  • Pregame: the team introductions didn't have quite the same fire they did two years ago. There was something intangible about the way the Patriots entered last time--maybe it was the formation, with the players almost hopping out in drill-like formation; maybe it was the announcer made it known that the Patriots would march out as a team, after the Rams chose to introduce its "Greatest Show on Turf."
  • Another random thought occurred to me during the weekend, before the game. What I figured was if that the Panthers tried to introduce individual players, they'd get clobbered by the Patriots. They didn't, and it turned out to be a very close game--too close.
  • Halftime show: missed it. Not a loss, from what I've heard and read. Although it's interesting that the FCC can be outraged by a flash of bosom, but not the scams being proposed by Fox and CBS.
  • Postgame: Very cool. Except for two things. The Boston fans did get a little too rowdy (fire-hopping outside a downtown Uno's and a rather disastrous SUV accident). And . . . .
  • Tedy Bruschi: he was seemingly omnipresent post-game (had he been a Panther, he would have been ubiquitous, but that's another story). He had a rather unnerving moment with the Lombardi trophy (see the last photo). He somehow managed to pop into about half a dozen other player interviews across the local networks, and most frighteningly, congratulated Vinatieri with what me and my friends could only describe as a "love tackle." It definitely weirded us out.
  • When the aforementioned last picture on the page linked above appeared, the caption originally read "Adam Vinatieri earned a second dance with the Lombardi." I (and probably many other irate Pats fans) apparently schooled the Page 2 editors, as the caption was promptly corrected.

Monday, February 02, 2004

The Mighty Kasay Has Kicked Out

There were so many horns honking up and down Mass. Ave. tonight, you'd think the Patriots just won the Super Bowl again.

Oh, wait. . . . They did. I was speechless. One of my friends now has six bleeding knuckles to show for the vehemence of his celebration.

I'll have so much more to say once I have a chance to regain my ability to write.

Sunday, February 01, 2004

A must-read

Anybody who has any doubts as to why they shouldn't take part in this year's election had better read Robert Kuttner's recent article in The American Prospect, which has a rather frightening scenario for what we can all look forward to in a second Bush administration. [In short: Bye-bye civil liberties, environmental protection, financing for public education, and any other progressive causes that you think might be a good idea.]

Stupid regulations

According to an article in today's Boston Globe, it's apparently a violation of NFL policy not to introduce individual players from your team. I don't get it--if they want to run out as a team, why not let them be a team?