Category Archives: Arts & culture

Say what?

My partner, Carol, is a freelance writer who has specialized in issues of ecological pollution prevention, particularly issues relating to water and wastewater. Which is my roundabout introduction before I tell people that her second book is titled Liquid Gold: The Lore and Logic of Using Urine To Grow Plants. The process of Carol writing that book proved very interesting for me; I learned more about urine than I thought I wanted to know; and we now own an Internet urinal, a female urinal, prints of old toilets, and other artifacts relating to urine. So it is that I cannot help but let you know about an upcoming cultural event here in the greater New Bedford area:

Urinetown: The Musical. The UMass Dartmouth Theatre Company presents the New England collegiate premiere of the Tony-Winning 2001 musical hit. Directed and choregraphed by Terry Berliner. On the stage of the Main Auditorium, main campus of UMass Dartmouth (patrons may park in Lots 4 & 5). December 15-18, 2005, with performances on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at 8pm; Sunday matinee at 2pm. Tickets are available at the UMass Pass office, at Café Arpeggio in Downtown New Bedford, and by calling (508) 999-8167.

Be there. Aloha.

Wesley Clark weighs in

I don’t usually do politics on this blog, but the war in Iraq is so much a part of all our lives that you really can’t avoid it; it’s a part of our culture now, like it or not. I have not been impressed with the shrill exchanges between the Democrats and the Republicans regarding the war, but I was impressed by Gen. Wesley Clark’s recent op-ed piece in the New York Times. Clark disagrees with both President Bush and the Democrats positions on the war:

While the Bush administration and its critics escalated the debate last week over how long our troops should stay in Iraq, I was able to see the issue through the eyes of America’s friends in the Persian Gulf region. The Arab states agree on one thing: Iran is emerging as the big winner of the American invasion, and both President Bush’s new strategy and the Democratic responses to it dangerously miss the point. It’s a devastating critique. And, unfortunately, it is correct.

The complete piece is posted on the Securing America blog, along with questions for Clark, and Clark’s responses to those questions.

There’s a cultural point in all this, too: it feels to me as if Americans of all political persuasions are increasingly isolating themselves from how other countries perceive America. I cannot think that’s a good thing. I believe Gen. Clark offers us a useful new, non-isolationist, direction for American discussions of our place in the world.

I also note in passing that religious liberals have a long history of a bias towards taking an international perspective, which is part of our religious understanding that all human beings are linked beyond the narrow confines of national identity. We used to call it “world brotherhood”; now we call it “the interconnected web.”

Thanks to first cousin once removed Abbie for the link to Securing America.

So that’s what we’re doing here…

As I noted on November 9, Seth Goodin is my favorite marketing guru at the moment, and now I’ve started reading his blog. In a post from November 30 titled “Welcome to the Hobby Economy,” Goodin tells us why he keeps a blog:

Economists don’t know what to do about it.

It’s hard to measure, hard to quantify and a little odd to explain.

More and more people are spending more and more time (and money) on pursuits that have no payoff other than satisfaction.

“Why should you have a blog?” they ask. “How are you going to make any money?”…

Of course, economists don’t really worry about this. They understand perfectly well that economics is able to easily explain that human beings pursue things that satisfy them.

“Hobby economy” sounds a little pejorative. Still, I think it’s a good concept that could also be applied to religion. Most human beings pursue religion because it satisfies them. You don’t have to make money at it. I happen to make money doing religion (although if I went back to sales, I could make a lot more money than I do now), but I do things like keep this blog, which brings in no money at all.

When we think about marketing religion, all too often we only think about hiring an ad agency and developing a major media campaign. That’s thinking of religion in terms of the business model of marketing. If we start thinking about religion in terms of the hobby economy, how would we do marketing? We’d invite people to join the regular meetings of our hobby group. We’d do things like keep a blog to promote our hobby, or have conferences to entice new people into our hobby. Any time anyone asked about our hobby we’d talk about it with passion and enthusiasm.

Not that we should abandon the ad agencies and the major media campaigns. Not that religion really fits into the “hobby economy” model. But it’s getting me thinking about marketing in new ways….

Spicy Lime

Update, Feb. 11, 2006: This post continues to get a fair number of hits. Until Spicy Lime gets their own Web site, here’s some basic info:

Located at 522 Pleasant Streeet in downtown New Bedford — Head south on Route 18, at the second set of lights after I-195 turn right onto Union St. (across from ferry terminal), turn left at the fourth traffic light onto Sixth St., then first left, and first left again onto one-way Pleasant St. Spicy Lime is on your left, and parking is usually very easy.

Their phone number is 508-992-3330. Hours: Mon-Fri 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., every day for dinner, 5:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.

The original post, below, has info about the menu….

When we first moved to downtown New Bedford, I felt it was missing something important. Downtown Geneva, Illinois, where we lived last year had a good cheap Thai restaurant. And the Rock Ridge neighborhood of Oakland, where we lived the year before, had a good cheap sushi restaurant within walking distance. When we eat out, we tend to prefer good cheap Asian food. When we moved here, downtown New Bedford had only one Chinese restaurant, which friends warned us away from: friends don’t let friends eat bad greasy MSG-laden Asian food.

Downtown New Bedford now has Spicy Lime Thai restaurant, which opened a couple of weeks ago at 522 Pleasant St., near Union St. It’s relatively cheap, with a $5.95 lunch special and most dinner dishes priced at $8.95. And it’s pretty good. What more could I ask?

For dinner tonight, we started with spring rolls: taro root, some kind of dark mushroom, and bean thread in a yummy deep-fried roll. Carol had basil seafood soup, with shrimp, fish, and mussels in a light broth swimming with basil leaves, lemongrass, other spices (the only turnoff for me was that they put tomato in it). I had pad se-ew; I almost always have pad se-ew at Thai resturants; this is the third time I’ve had Spicy Lime’s pad se-ew, and the waitress even said, “You had that last time, didn’t you?” Good thick stir-fried rice noodles, not too greasy, with broccoli, zucchini, and carrots; not exactly Asian vegetables, but good nonetheless.

It’s not fancy, but we liked what we ate. The ingredients were fresh, the cook has a nice way with the herbs and spices. The tables are crowded together in a small room with minimal decor, but it feels friendly. The staff is still working on their timing (be sure you order an appetizer because chances are you will wait a while for your meal), but they’re getting better.

I think Spicy Lime fills a void in the downtown resturant scene at dinner time. The other bars and restaurants have their niches. The waterfront bars get the people who just want to drink, Minerva’s pizza gets people who want fast food, Freestone’s draws the white yup-scale crowd, The Main Event seems to draw the hip Portugese yup-scale crowd, Cafe Arpeggio the academics and scruffy singer-songwriters; but Spicy Lime seems to be the place for the cultural creatives: gallery owners, artists, downtown residents, students from the art school.

For “dog people”

Some of us are cat people, and like LitterBox Cam. But I know some of you out there are dog people. For you, the place to go might be the Daily Oliver, with daily pictures of Oliver the Weimeraner. Best part of this blog: the comments from dog lovers around the world.

Comparisons with William Wegman’s photography may seem inevitable, but are not really warranted. It’s a blog, not postmodernly ironic fine art photography.

However, differences between the Daily Oliver and LitterBox Cam might reveal some differences between dog lovers and cat lovers. Dog lovers want lots of interaction with other dog lovers, so dog lover Web sites allow comments. Cat lovers are more individualistic and don’t even notice the absence of a comment feature. The cat lovers have a Web site where you can click on the Web cam image to create a small remote window that you can place in a corner of your screen, where the cats can come and go as they please while you do your work on the computer. The dog lovers have a Web site that only comes when you call it. Yes, I have pushed this far enough, so I will stop.

Vintage pre-1920 recordings online

The Special Collections department of the library at University of California at Santa Barbara has an ongoing project of digitizing pre-1920 wax cylinder recordings, and making the digital files available online. I found out about this project from the blog Ukulelia, who reported on some great early recordings of Hawaiian music. But you’ll find music from classical to popular song to early jazz as well.

My favorite recording so far? Well, there are some good recordings by the Ford Hawaiians, but I really like “Clarinet Squawk,” by the Louisiana Five, hot jazz from 1920.

Panda cam

Yup, the National Zoo in Washington DC now has a PandaCam video feed on their Web site. They’re getting so much traffic, visits are limited to 15 minutes, and even at that it took us two tries to get access to PandaCam. That’s OK, though, because while you wait they have entertaining daily written updates you can read that tell what Tai, the baby panda, is up to today.

Best baby panda photo, however, is at today’s story on Tai at BBC News. Click on the photo to enlarge it, so you can see Tai’s expression. Way too cute. And, well, life-affirming.

Peter Drucker

The Economist online has an excellent appreciation of Peter Drucker, the management theorist who died on November 11. The article’s assessment of Drucker’s legacy makes it worth reading if you have the slightest interest in this field. After a thoughtful, balanced examination of Drucker’s achievements in business management, the unsigned article says:

Moreover, Mr Drucker continued to produce new ideas up until his 90s. His work on the management of voluntary organisations—particularly religious organisations—remained at the cutting edge.

Cutting edge, and very useful — his work continues to guide what I do in congregational life. I only hope that Drucker’s work in management of voluntary organizations is now taken up by a new generation of talented thinkers.

The cultural impact of rootkits

Turns out, the problems with Dad’s fastest computer is an evil rootkit in the Windows partition. He’s not sure if the rootkit came from one of Sony-BMG’s CDs, with their ill-conceived rootkit designed to stop people from copying the CDs. But wherever Dad’s rootkit came from, it made me want to learn more about rootkits and related malware so I can protect the computers I use — and if you don’t care about the gory details, you can skip to the cultural commentary in the last paragraph of this post.

First, Dad pointed out that if you run a recent version of Windows on your computer, you can protect yourself from rootkits fairly simply. Set up a domain user account, and do just about everything from that user account, because when you’re logged in as a user account Windows will prompt you for an administrator password most times when there is an attempt to modify operating system files. (Fortunately, the Windows machines at church are already set up that way.)

But even if you’ve set up your computer that way, you have no reason to be smug. As Larry Selzer points out in a column over at eWeek, any computer user can get prompted to enter their administrator password at the behest of malware because…

…normal users will probably see this situation as similar to all the other times they installed software. Every now and then they need to provide these credentials and they’ll just do it this time too….

…so we’ll just have to be even more suspicious, er, careful.

Second, what to do about my Mac? Mac users are not quite as safe from rootkit-type malware as we’d like to think, according to The Unofficial Apple Weblog. And Adam over at the blog “Emergent Chaos”, writes:

…while the default user is in the “admin” group, the admin group is not extremely powerful…. Often, to install software, you need to type your password. That’s because the admin group is not powerful enough for some important install types. Usually. For some install types. Not other times. And that ‘not other times’ will be the path that attackers use. It’s the path that you use dragging apps from a dmg (disk image) to /Applications.

So I’m making sure I use the Mac only from within a user account, unless absolutely necessary. And I’m trying to remember to never, never, never type in that administrator password unless I really know why I’m being prompted for it. And I’ll just have to be even more suspicious, er, careful.

For now, Dad is running his infected computer primarily using the Linux partition, since he has to meet a deadline using the software in that partition. Eventually he will have to completely erase the hard drive, and re-install operating systems in both partitions, along with all his applications and data files. We talked about safe computing, and Dad’s future strategy will be to use an older, slower computer (with no critical files on its hard drive) to access email and the Web; the fast computer will be reserved for his research and consulting work.

To my mind, this whole Sony rootkit debacle raises an interesting cultural point. I have had to learn way more about rootkits than I wanted to know. Computers are still not the mainstream, foolproof consumer goods the manufacturers would have us believe. You still have to be something of a geek to use them — and you have to be willing and able to hire a real geek on a regular basis to take care of the really bad problems. In short, in spite of the fact that something over half of U.S. households have a computer, computers are nowhere near as mainstream as telephones or TVs (I mean, have you ever heard of a telephone geek, or a TV geek?), and seem unlikely to become that mainstream for some time to come.