How to spot a baby conservative

You know that any article starting off like this is going to get mentioned on this blog:

“Remember the whiny, insecure kid in nursery school, the one who always thought everyone was out to get him, and was always running to the teacher with complaints? Chances are he grew up to be a conservative. At least, he did if he was one of 95 kids from the Berkeley area that social scientists have been tracking for the last 20 years. The confident, resilient, self-reliant kids mostly grew up to be liberals.”

Mr. Levitt? Mr. Dubner? Anything to add?

[via The Toronto Star]

Good. Bad. Fugly.

Good: the Canadiens are beating the pants off the Leafs, 5-1 as I watch this (though the Habs just took a double-minor and the only way the Leafs can score is on the PP).
Bad: the Devils have blown their 3-goal lead to the Trashers — the team the Canadiens are chasing for the last playoff spot — and given up the go-ahead goal.

Fugly: Duke just lost to LSU because J.J. Redick couldn’t hit his shot, and the Blue Devils couldn’t play defense or box out in the final few minutes. This, I believe, shall throw a lot of NCAA pools into disarray.

Holy crapinaw!

After years and years and years of waiting, Nellie’s wishes have finally been answered. Season one of The Young Riders has been released on DVD. I’m not kidding. She was squealing with joy as she opened the packaging.

.:.

I’m watching the Leafs and Canadiens play on TSN. Even though the game’s in Montreal and TSN’s usually a fairly impartial network, it’s like watching the game in a Toronto bar ’cause Joe Bowen and Harry Neale are calling it.

.:.

Just ordered our festival pass for Hot Docs. By the time I get back from my course next wek the lineup should be announced. I love Hot Docs; dollar for dollar it’s the best festival value in the city.

A damnable doctrine

I was listening to an old episode of Alan Cross’s Ongoing History Of New Music podcast, in which he talked about the cocktail party effect.The Wikipedia article talks about recognizing one voice in a crowded room, but Alan talked about being able to recognize a song playing on a stereo, even in a very crowded and noisy room (like a bar). My brother and I have always been really good at this, to the point where I can sometimes name songs that no one else hears. I could never understand why that was; do my brother and I just subconsciously listen for music in the background? Could be. Do we happen to know way more songs than most people and therefore recognize something? I doubt it; I know a lot of songs but I’ve been in bars with people who know as many or more and who didn’t hear what I heard. Are some people better at “source separation” than others? I have no idea. Maybe I’m like Bruce Willis in unbreakable and this is my superpower. ‘Cept not-so-super.

Does anyone else do this? Identify songs from hearing one or two measures here, a couple of notes there, scattered in the background of a noisy bar? Is it that no one can do it? Or that no one but us music obsessives tries?

.:.

Salon has an interesting interview with Edward O. Wilson about “why we’re hard-wired to form tribalistic religions, denies that ‘evolutionism’ is a faith, and says that heaven, if it existed, would be hell.”

“Possibly the greatest philosophical question of the 21st century is the resolution of religious faith with the growing realization of the very different nature of the material world. You could say that we evolved to accept one truth — the religious instinct — but then discovered another. And having discovered another, what are we to do? You might say it’s just best to go ahead and accept the two worldviews and let them live side by side. I see no other solution. I believe they can use their different worldviews to solve some of the great problems — for example, the environment. But generally speaking, the difficulty in saying they can live side by side is a sectarianism in the world today, and traditional religions can be exclusionary and used to justify violence and war. You just can’t deny that this is a major problem.”

It’s good readin’. It also reminds me why I’m eternally grateful to my parents for making me read and think, as opposed to memorize and recite.

.:.

[bragging uncle] My nephew, who’s 6, finished second in his age range in a chess tournament last week. [/bragging uncle]

Of Mice and Lem

Finally back at work today. Still not at 100%, but at least I no longer feel like patient zero.

.:.

CH (the local channel that picks up Global Television’s scraps) has pissed us off once again where The Shield is concerned. Nellie discovered that, with two episodes left in the season, they’d moved the show without announcing it. Good thing she noticed when she did; the finale is this Sunday (which I’ll miss ’cause I’ll be on course…gack!!), so we had to bittorrent the second-to-last episode. And maaaaaaaaaaan, is it gettin’ good. To take a show that good and add Forest Whitaker…it’s almost too much. I’m practically giddy thinking about the showdown that’s coming up. There’s not much on TV that can catch my interest like this.

Constant lovers

Spacing says the TTC is working with Google to create a usable transit map. I will be supremely happy on day that this happens.

.:.

Seriously, anxiety or no, this kid is now the envy of everyone who’s ever had this teacher. –>

.:.

I agree with M_Blogler: I’ve lost a bit of respect for Thom Yorke after reading this article. If he was serious about wanting to make a difference he could’ve gone through with the meeting. That said, he might know more about just how futile an exercise it’d be to meet with the PM’s handlers and doesn’t want to put himself through that. Still, it sounds a little chickenshit.

.:.

I might have to go see these ladies when they come through town. They belt out a mean tune.

Typhoid Danny

Had to stay home from work today. I’m coughing and sneezing so much that I’d just cause an outbreak, so I worked on my couch. I’m hoping to be ok enough tomorrow that I can a) go to the office without causing the black plague and b) play basketball, but I think that might be a stretch.

.:.

Nellie managed to locate episode 1 of the new Sopranos season last night, and she’s working on episode 2 right now, so we might be almost up to date. It’s been practically impossible to avoid news about the previous night’s episode (just as I’ve heard spoiler information about other shows, such as Six Feet Under…which finally comes out next Tuesday!) so maybe this way we can shorten danger period from months (’til they come out on DVD) to a day or two.