Jan 14, 2009 1
Adolf Hitler Taken Into State Custody
Repugnance, however fiercely or communally felt, does not constitute grounds for separating parents from their children.
a set of sharp and cogent notes

Jack Rose died suddenly in December, leaving behind a nice body of work including Kensington Blues, Raag Manifestos, and Two Originals. Noted mostly for his American Primitive solo guitar music, Rose’s previous two records Dr. Ragtime and Pals and Jack Rose and the Black Twig Pickers present a shift to a full-bodied sound featuring other players. Luck in the Valley, released last month as his last album, continues this progression. It is tempting to read the pathos of his death into songs like the excellent “Blues For Percy Danforth”, which sounds closer to his earlier Takoma-inspired work. And in a way, it would be nice to hear more “serious” tracks that can be linked up into some kind of meaning-of-death constellation. For fans with this mindset, Luck in the Valley might be disappointingly happy. But it would be unfair to begrudge Rose’s last album for emphasizing fun and enjoyment over theoretical depth. John Fahey infamously dismissed his earlier work as “cosmic sentimentalism,” a criticism that seems to strike more at the expectations of listeners than the quality of his music. If we move beyond considering Rose’s songs as spiritual mood enhancers, there is a lot of good music to enjoy on Luck. Rose sounds like he was having a good time at the end. -- Scott Coomes

Described by its creator — talented illustrator Neill Cameron — as "a martial arts rom-com slice of life soap opera," this webcomic is about the lives of the people who run and participate in an alternate universe fight club known as "The Thump." The story, at least the first part of it, aligns itself with the perspective of Catriona, a down-on-her-luck paramedic whose life turns around when she responds to an ad that leads to her becoming The Thump's resident nurse. I like her, because she's spunky and doesn't have inhumanly pneumatic bodily proportions. Equally charming is Alex, who videotapes the fights to later sell on the internet to "a certain kind of teenager that'll lap that shit up." Read the comic, cry when you hit the last page and realize you're all caught up and now have to wait for future installments which might not ever come due to Cameron's being a kickass illustrator who now gets paid for his awesome skills, and then check out Cameron's personal site, which offers a nice peek into his process. -- Erin Price

All the President's Men is rightfully known as the best movie about journalism ever made, but it's most notable for not focusing its paranoia in the form of several nefarious people. The last film in director Alan Pakula's "paranoia trilogy" (which includes Klute and The Parallax View), All the President's Men is notable in the genre for never depicting the agents of paranoia that torments reporters Bob Woodward (Robert Redford) and Carl Bernstein (Dustin Hoffman). Yes, we know them to be agents of the Nixon Administration, but because they're never seen in the movie, it's never clear exactly what constitutes a victory in the fight against corruption. We know that the reporters' lives are in danger, but from whom? The CIA? FBI? Deep Throat says "everybody is involved," after all. Woodward and Bernstein's reports eventually result in the imprisonment and resignation of Nixon and his cronies, yet Pakula downplays it with the perfunctory rattling off of punishments on The Washington Post's press in a manner fitting the lack of closure of lenient punishments for a few solitary figures. The institutional rot went deeper and will persist as long as culprits remain identified. You may not see anyone over your shoulder, but that doesn't mean they're not somewhere. -- Eric Freeman
Jan 14, 2009 1
Repugnance, however fiercely or communally felt, does not constitute grounds for separating parents from their children.
"Until we have a full neurophysiological and philosophical understanding of consciousness, we will lack a complete understanding of psychotropic drugs, whether marijuana or Thorazine." Neil Scheurich on [biomedical] psychiatry's overconfident and grandiose claims to diagnostic specificity and treatment efficacy.
How does what we want others to think of us mitigate our biases? Nate Silver on California's marijuana-legalizing Proposition 19 and the opinion polls.
Ask.com is making another attempt to rejigger itself, this time into a search engine with an element chief competitor Google doesn't have: actual human beings guiding askers and giving answers.
Even Bill O'Reilly is fed up with President Obama's feet-dragging on nixing 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell': "Just sign an executive order. I don't know why it's taking so long. It's not fair. We should stop this nonsense."
Some repeat felons in Texas are now being sent to probationary reading groups instead of prison. Hey, it turns out that humane forms of rehabilitation actually work. Imagine that.
Gabe Delahaye exposes Comic-Con for what it is: an utterly exploitative and senseless mess that plays to the worst aspects of nerd culture and treats its biggest devotees like glorified cattle. See you next year in San Diego!
Scott Tobias picks out ten moments of cynical sincerity from Adam Sandler movies. He basically could have just chosen the entirety of Click, but kudos for the restraint.
"While people on the street still understand on some level that suicides still happen, the notion that in 2008, twenty years after the introduction of Prozac, a writer of the caliber of David Foster Wallace would go and kill himself seemed, well, so 19th century, or at least, so 1963." Ars Psychiatria on writers and suicide, Wallace on suicide, and persisting ignorant, misunderstanding stigma.
Alex Trebek turned 70 today. In his honor, Urlesque collected a few of his most bizarre moments as host of Jeopardy! If you love condescension, Trebek is the host for you.
"American culture has killed so much that once gave pleasure to so many that it seems only logical to expect that books will be next." Marco Roth on the American novel in n+1.
If only Superman were here! He could like the tip of a tongue rim the globe, reversing time so we could witness live his alter-ego Christopher Reeve getting it on with gay porn star Cal Culver. Alas for so many reasons.
If someone had told me in kindergarten that Public Printer of the United States was a job, that's what I would have wanted to be when I grew up. Too late now, I guess.
In a recent Australian survey, nearly half of the 1000 respondents said that romantic comedies have ruined their views of what makes for an ideal relationship. This makes more sense when you realize that most Australian romantic comedies are about rabid kangaroos and dingos.
In anticipation of Sunday's premiere of the fourth season of Mad Men, Vulture collects Betty Draper's best parenting moments. Somehow, last season's Barbie speech isn't here, but everything else is magical.
David Mitchell, my favorite contemporary author, speaks with Michael Krasny of the Bay Area's local NPR affiliate about his work, writing in general, and his influences. In addition to being tremendously gifted, Mitchell seems to also be one hell of a swell guy. I want him to be my best friend.
Sarah Palin thought "refudiate" was a word and then compared herself to William Shakespeare. It's just another day in the life of America's very own Lady Macbeth. Or would she be the Thane of Cawdor?