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Of course, this isn't going to happen. Workers and communities in both our countries, Canada's Justin Trudeau has tweeted, benefit from being each other's biggest trading and security partner. There isn't a snowball's chance in hell that Canada would become part of the United States.
JANUARY 8, 2025 BEDROLLS?
JANUARY 5, 2025 UNSCRIPTED TV
As I mentioned earlier, I like documentaries that answer questions scientifically. Specifically, documentaries that dramatize airplane crashes. What went wrong? It's usually possible to sort out the evidence in 15 or 20 minutes and, in the final minute, describe what changes have been made to lessen the possibility of the same things going wrong in the future. A one-hour program can solve three such mysteries. However, TV channels have lots of time on their hands, so usually a single case is stretched out to fill a full hour. That requires a lot of repetition. Several times we hear the co-pilot saying V1; rotate. Several times we hear an alarm sounding. Several times we see an animation of the plane smashing into the ground. Yes, we know, it was a major disaster, but let's find the black boxes and get on with the investigation. Lately I watched two extreme examples of this sort of stretching, one about Amelia Earhart and the other about D.B. Cooper. While attempting to fly around the world in a Lockheed Electra in 1937, Earhart planned to refuel at tiny Howland Island in the south Pacific. But she radioed, We must be on you, but we cannot see you. Fuel is running low. Been unable to reach you by radio. We are flying at 1,000 feet. The plane presumably crashed, but the wreckage has never been found. Military historian Michael Carra became intrigued with the story of an Australian patrol that encountered airplane wreckage in the jungles of Papua New Guinea during World War II. Could that be the remains of Earhart's Electra? Of course not; PNG is 2,500 miles west of Howland, so it would be unreachable if fuel is running low. But we're only asking questions. Folks still wonder about Amelia, so such speculation can still draw interest. Carra filmed a two-week expedition to PNG which did uncover some scattered aircraft wreckage from the war, but not the Electra. He also painstakingly authenticated the Australian patrol's map, down to an analysis of the graphite in its pencil notations. Though interesting, that proves nothing. But now we have a two-hour documentary of his ultimately meaningless project. In 1971, an airline passenger calling himself Dan Cooper hijacked a 727, demanded money and parachutes, jumped out the rear door, and vanished. Who was he, really? The FBI processed more than a thousand serious suspects. A couple of researchers decided that Cooper must have been one Robert Wesley Rackstraw. They spent five years compiling a list of 93 circumstantial reasons. Those don't prove anything, said the FBI. Rackstraw's attorney called the allegation the stupidest thing I've ever heard. In 2016 the FBI suspended active investigation of the case because the Bureau had more important things to worry about. Nevertheless, documentarians put together a TV program fingering Rackstraw. It was two hours long and included a lot of repeated interviews. No, wait, that was only Part One; a similar Part Two followed. Four hours of television. A tale told by idiots, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. Bring back stories that come to a satisfying conclusion!
JANUARY 3, 2015 HOW ABOUT THE TRILOBITES? A sports headline told me the Panthers are playing the Cardinals today. Are the Pitt Panthers kicking off against the Louisville Cardinals in another of those bowls? Or are the Florida Panthers skating into the St. Louis Cardinals ballpark for another of those outdoor hockey games? No, this is the National Football League, so its the Carolina Panthers against the Arizona Cardinals. We need more uniqueness among nicknames. Coelacanths, anybody?
JANUARY 1, 2015 FOUR-LETTER MNEMONIC
DECEMBER 29, 2024 DON'T TOUCH THE BEEZ I'm watching a one-hour murder mystery on TV, and a new character seems to appear every few minutes. Later, when a character says I suspect that Edith had a hand in this, I'm at a loss. Who's Edith? Is that the mayor's secretary or the elderly housekeeper? I here highly resolve that in the future, whenever someone new is introduced I'll write down a name and description for future reference. Of course we know what happens to resolutions. In preparing episode 14 of season 17 of the Canadian series Murdoch Mysteries, scriptwriter Keri Ferencz tried to make things easier for me. The surnames she gave many of the characters provide hints. The story revolves around bees, which are wingéd and shiny. They're the villains in a horror novel by an author with the unlikely name of Anthony Winghed-Sheen. Anthony is the first suspect when a university dean is stung to death by bees and then burned in a fire. The police talk to a melittologist (a bee expert), Leonard Beezbruch. (The former hockey goalie spelled it the Belgian way, Vanbiesbrouck.) Then they question a fire expert, Demetre LaFlamme, and finally a pretty student, Cornelia Sweet. The latter turns out to be the real culprit, and the scriptwriter makes it clear that Miss Sweet has been overlooked because she's a sweet young girl.
When
she tries to pedal away, the police inspector comically chases her
on a bicycle, accompanied by the music of Rimsky-Korsakov's The
Flight of the Bumblebee.
How do I know that? One of my earliest childhood memories was of a moment at a picnic. Some ice had been discarded and a fuzzy bumblebee had landed on it. I tried to pet it.
DECEMBER 26, 2014 POINTS FOR KRE'8'IFFYTEY In televising college sports, I often encounter first names, or spellings of first names, that Ive never seen before. For example, on womens basketball teams in the Atlantic Coast Conference, there are players named Aaliyah, Arica, Ataijah, Ayisa, Brielle, Chanelle, Chania, Cortnee, Daneesha, DeAshia, Emiah, Emilee, Emmonnie, Erykah, JaeLisa, Jassany, JKyra, Kaela, Kalia, Karima, Kelila, Keyanna, Keyona, Khadedra, LenNique, Lyneé, MaKayla, Markisha, Millesa, Myisha, Mykia, Necole, Nigia, Nylah, Oderah, Roddreka, Shakayla, Shakena, Shawnta, Shayra, and Xylina among others. Their parents gave them their unusual monikers. When you have several kids and every other family on your block has several kids, you dont want them to bear tired old names like Erica. You need to invent something distinctive like Arica or Erykah.
I think sometimes parents, particularly African-American parents, choose random euphonic syllables and then concatenate them to form a musically pleasing combination. Or they use existing names that fit that pattern. In many cases, its the middle syllable thats accented, as in Natasha and Malia Obama. Mormons from Utah, on the other hand, don't go for poetic-sounding neologisms. They prefer to show how orthographically unconventional they can be. They're too clever, say I. We almost had a President named for a baseball glove. I wrote a little poem imagining what Utah fatherhood might be like, using actual names from a couple of videos (for girls and for boys) that demonstrate LDS nomenclature.
DECEMBER 23, 2024 DUPLICATE PRESENTS A peek behind the curtain: Sometimes I draft little essays and file them away for future use. When I need an article for this website, I can pull an item from that file and polish it a bit. But sometimes I fail to remember that I have actually done so and that I have neglected to erase the original item from the file. During 2024, I posted one item about automated customer service on February 28 and again on October 29, and I posted a different item about the dangers of drinking on August 26 and again on November 13. Sorry! Another observation of excess: TV live studio audiences have become unnecessarily rowdy. On December 19, comedian Nate Bargatze hosted a CBS variety hour from the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville. One expects musical numbers to be followed by warm applause, but the Tennessee fans repeatedly leaped to their feet, even rising for a standing ovation during a song. I thought the performances were fine but hardly worthy of such unrestrained celebration, which I find distracting. Two nights later, NBC aired the final Saturday Night Live of 2024. Seated in a leather chair, Tom Hanks began the cold open with the word Hello. As soon as his image appeared on the monitors, rapturous screaming and hollering began. It persisted for 22 seconds, and he had to raise a hand for silence twice before he was able to continue. More former hosts came to the stage and were greeted with the same enthusiasm. The constant interruptions disrupted the pace, stretching what I'm guessing was a six-minute script into more than nine minutes. Eventually there were 11 folks on stage to proclaim, Live from New York, it's Saturday Night! Later, when Weekend Update mentioned popular murderer Luigi Mangione, there was similar loud cheering and clapping. I was brought up to keep respectful silence even between movements of a symphony. I prefer to listen to the performers rather than to the audience.
When I look outside the window, first it's night, then evening, then it's night again. That's what Aleksei Navalny wrote last year. He never saw the spring, mysteriously dying on February 16, 2024.
DECEMBER 18, 2024 A SIGN IN THE HEAVENS Astrologers carefully study the night sky.
So
do their modern counterparts: astronomers. This fall,
the latter predicted a 95% chance that a faint star called T Coronae
Borealis, normally too faint to see with the naked eye, could go
nova before the end of the year. (It hasn't happened
yet.) The explosion should be the brightest nova, or new
star, since 1975. It will shine for about a week, glowing
as brightly as the north star Polaris. Do changes in the night sky somehow predict events that will happen here on earth? A few astrologers in ancient Babylon thought this was the case. One of those men tells his story in my new article, The Nova.
DECEMBER 15, 2024 CAREFUL WHAT YOU BROADCAST
But my village of Richwood will have carolers and carriage rides through the park this Thursday, made possible by Pat's Print Shop (above) and VFW Post 870. The Richwood Area Business Association promises, It's going to be a truly magical night.
Is Eric a bearded piano player? Why, yes; yes, he is. But two months ago today, he revealed two other personal characteristics both of which are big parts of who I am, he says. Neither is his Defining Characteristic, but they may be surprising to some of his readers. What are they? Click on Snidely Tweeting 3 if you dare!
DECEMBER 4, 2024 TOYS TOYS TOYS FOR TOT
On the radio this morning, the conversation was about toy overabundance. Anytime someone visits, they bring along something for the kid, who plays with it that day. Is it thrown away afterwards? No, it's left within easy reach on the floor. Eventually it finds its way into a leaf-bag of small objects out in the garage, to be discarded after the kid has grown up. (No wonder our oceans are becoming polluted with plastic.)
Last holiday season, NBC aired a live broadcast of The Sound of Music. This year theyre doing Peter Pan. It airs Thursday. Of course, there have been many other versions of Pan over the 110 years since J.M Barrie first wrote a play about Peters adventures in Neverland. I remember especially the 1953 Walt Disney movie.
It was near the end of the last B1G Network football telecast of the regular season. According to the closed captioning, the announcers thanked their replay colleagues who were working in the tapeworm.
EARLIER
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