Am I missing the goat? I mean boat?

The new Black Keys disc Magic Potion is very good. If you’re a fan of chunky, fuzzy blues/rock, you’ll like this.

I just can’t get into the new Mountain Goats disc Get Lonely. In general, I’m a little hot and cold on the band…actually, that’s not true. I’m more cold than hot. A lot more. This new disc is no different…despite all the love it’s getting, it just all sounds blah and meh to me.

[tags]black keys – magic potion, mountain goats – get lonely[/tags]

Distilled

We have winnowed the list of 82 films down to 13 (a friend of ours is taking 2):

  1. Thu Sep 7: The Bothersome Man *or* Requiem
  2. Fri Sep 8: Citizen Duane *or* Chronicle of an Escape
  3. Sat Sep 9: The Wind That Shakes the Barley *or* EMPz 4 Life
  4. Sat Sep 9: Rescue Dawn *or* All the Boys Love Mandy Lane
  5. Sun Sep 10: Candy *or* Retrieval
  6. Sun Sep 10: Kurt Cobain About A Son *or* 2:37
  7. Mon Sep 11: Diggers *or* Blindsight
  8. Mon Sep 11: Little Children *or* Fay Grim
  9. Tue Sep 12: The Half Life of Timofey Berezin *or* 10 Items or Less
  10. Wed Sep 13: The Hottest State *or* Day Night Day Night
  11. Thu Sep 14: The Pleasure of Your Company *or* Snow Cake
  12. Fri Sep 15: D.O.A.P. *or* Penelope
  13. Sat Sep 16: Outsourced *or* Macbeth

Nellie’s filling out the paperwork now. Tomorrow I’ll drop it off and lock my fingers into the “crossed” position.

[tags]tiff, toronto international film festival[/tags]

Slush anyone?

Last week TimmyD blogged about the (now-resolved) softwood lumber dispute between Canada and the US. It seems there’s a potential new wrinkle in the story which, if true, is pretty unsettling:

The Tyee has an excerpt from testimony delivered by an American trade lawyer to our own Standing Committee on International Trade. Not only does Elliot Feldman lambaste the Conservatives’ softwood lumber deal as a rotten deal for Canada but he lets us in on something that ought to be a headline on every media outlet in the country: of the one billion dollars plus that we’re allowing the Americans to keep under the terms of that deal, $450 million goes straight to the White House with no congressional oversight. The legalese in the contract says it will go for “meritorious initiatives”. Feldman calls it a slush fund and suggests that it will be used to help campaigning Republicans who are desperate to maintain control of both houses of congress in November’s mid-term elections. [from POGGE]

As if it weren’t bad enough that those $450 million were ill-gotten gains. Couldn’t they just end the duplicity at the unfair trade practices?

More here.

.:.

Gas prices are the lowest they’ve been in months. Not surprisingly, there are no headlines or lead stories on the news about how much easier life is for people who choose to live 80 km from where they work (or vice versa). Never fear; I’ll be sure to remind them next time they start up their (presumably gas-powered) whining machines again.

.:.

This is pretty hard to believe:

An architect of Iraqi descent has said he was forced to remove a T-shirt that bore the words “We will not be silent” before boarding a flight at New York. [from the BBC]

Wait…no it isn’t.

[tags]softwood lumber dispute, elliot feldman, slush fund, gas prices, we will not be silent[/tags]

Catch a downloadable Star

Very interesting idea by the Toronto Star (or maybe they copied it…I don’t pay much attention to the newspaper business) to offer a free PDF version of an afternoon paper for download, delivered to your inbox at 3:30 (or 4:15 if you want business news too). I like this idea for two reasons: 1) it shows the Star is thinking about…well, something new; 2) it might help to cut down on the unholy mess of free daily newspapers in our subway system. Each day, twice a day — after the morning and evening commutes — tens of thousands of those things are abandoned on subway seats and floors, stuffed into garbage cans, and left scattered about TTC stations. Of course, anybody who gets this daily email will likely just print the PDF, but since it’s not bound hopefully they’ll just print the pages they want; at the very least, it’s less paper consumed (and strewn about) than one of those daily rags.

Well done, Star.

[tags]toronto star, star p.m.[/tags]

My first cut of picks for the film festival

I just went through the festival guide and marked all the films I found interesting. I narrowed it down to 82. Nellie is reviewing my list now, whittling out the ones she doesn’t want, but she’s not being very brutal about it and we’re probably going to end up with about 70. Figure maybe 10-15 more get eliminated because of scheduling problems and…well, we’re gonna have some touch decision on our hands. We can only see 13 or 14, so somethin’s gotta give.

Anyway, here’s the first cut. I can’t be bothered linking them to the official schedule.

  1. 2:37
  2. 10 Items or Less
  3. 7 Ans
  4. A Few Days Later…
  5. A Good Year
  6. A Stone’s Throw
  7. Abeni
  8. After the Wedding
  9. All the Boys Love Mandy Lane
  10. All The King’s Men
  11. Amazing Grace
  12. As the Shadow
  13. Away From Her
  14. Babel
  15. Bamako
  16. Black Book
  17. Blindsight
  18. Bobby
  19. Book of Revelation, The
  20. Borat Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan
  21. Bothersome Man, The
  22. Breaking and Entering
  23. Cages
  24. Candy
  25. Cashback
  26. Catch a Fire
  27. Chacun sa nuit
  28. Cheech
  29. Chronicle of an Escape
  30. Citizen Duane
  31. Copying Beethoven
  32. D.O.A.P.
  33. Day Night Day Night
  34. Deliver Us From Evil
  35. Diggers
  36. Dixie Chicks – Shut Up and Sing
  37. Dog Problem, The
  38. EMPz 4 Life
  39. Fay Grim
  40. Fido
  41. For Your Consideration
  42. Fountain, The
  43. Four Minutes
  44. Griffin & Phoenix
  45. Half Life of Timofey Berezin, The
  46. Hottest State, The
  47. Island, The
  48. Jindabyne
  49. Journals of Knud Rasmussen, The
  50. Kurt Cobain About A Son
  51. Lake of Fire
  52. Last King of Scotland, The
  53. Last Kiss, The
  54. Last Winter, The
  55. Little Children
  56. London to Brighton
  57. Love and Other Disasters
  58. Macbeth
  59. Namesake, The
  60. Out Of The Blue
  61. Outsourced
  62. Penelope
  63. Pleasure of Your Company, The
  64. Quelques jours en Septembre
  65. Requiem
  66. Rescue Dawn
  67. Retrieval
  68. Seraphim Falls
  69. Severance
  70. Shame
  71. Shortbus
  72. Snow Cake
  73. Stranger than Fiction
  74. Thicker than Water
  75. This is England
  76. U.S. vs. John Lennon, The
  77. Un Crime
  78. Un Dimanche à Kigali
  79. Wake, The
  80. When The Levees Broke: A Requiem In Four Acts
  81. Wind That Shakes the Barley, The
  82. Zidane: Un Portrait du XXIe Siècle

[tags]toronto international film festival, TIFF[/tags]

A biiiiiiiiiiiig cut

Politicians often say stupid things. This is news to precisely no one. Some politicians occasionally say very stupid things, the sort late-night talk show hosts make fun of for a few days. Once in a while a politician will say something stupid and offensive, in which case they often resign.

Once in a while, though, a politician will say not one, but several things so profoundly stupid that you skip right over mockery and go straight to pity and bewilderment. Witness the latest: Katherine Harris, who can’t even get Florida Republicans to back her (even after she helped pilfer the 2000 election). She had this to say:

  • Separation of church and state is “a lie we have been told”;
  • Separation of church and state [is] “wrong because God is the one who chooses our rulers.”;
  • “If you’re not electing Christians, then in essence you are going to legislate sin”;

Zowie! Well…it’s obvious she’s trying to a) generate some publicity through controversy, and b) guarantee herself at least the wingnut vote which, in Florida, is not inconsequential. It can’t go anywhere, though; even Florida conservatives won’t go down those roads. She’s down 16-0 in the bottom of the ninth, and she just wants to put one run on the board so she doesn’t get shut out. This is what’s known as “swinging for the fences.”

What might bug me the most is that the immediate reaction was one of “that’s not fair to Jews.” And it wasn’t, certainly, but it’s a little bigger than that, don’t you think? I mean, had she said, “If you’re not electing Christians or Jews, then in essence you are going to legislate sin,” would that have been ok?

All quotes from CNN.

.:.

It looks like the Chuck Palahniuk novel Choke is coming to the big screen after all. I’ll be curious to see how much they tone it down.

[tags]katherine harris, wingnut, chuck palahniuk, choke adapted for big screen[/tags]

Coniption fit

In the summer of 1992 (I think…it might’ve been 1991) my friend Adam and I attended a rock music camp in Halifax. It was called Summer Rock, and lasted two weeks. I think they made it into a CBC TV show a few years ago. Anyway, we crashed on the floor of my oldest brother, TimmyD, who was attending TUNS (now called DalTech) at the time. The rock camp itself was…meh. The most interesting thing about it was that another bunch of teenagers calling themselves Thrush Hermit were there. It was weird to see them get a record deal long after I’d sold my drums for tuition money.

Two great things happened on that trip though:

First, it felt like the first time my oldest brother and I really hung out. He’s 6 years older than I, and when you’re a teenager your little kid brother isn’t who you hang out with. But I guess that summer when I was 16 or 17 I was a little less annoying or a little more interesting to be around, and we just hung out one weekend when Adam was away…we went to see Terminator 2 at the Park Lane theatre, went to his old computer lab at St. Mary’s and played computer games against each other from across the room (which was pretty killer technology at the time)…it all seemed pretty cool to a deeply uncool kid.

Second, Adam had his acoustic guitar at my brother’s place (I couldn’t carry my drums around with me, obviously, so I left them at the school where the camp was held). One night, for some reason, Tim decided to write some lyrics and pulled out a harmonica, and an impromptu jam session broke out in the tiny apartment on Tobin Street. At the time I used to carry around a little hand-held tape recorder, which Adam and I were constantly recording stuff on, and I left it running for most of the night. I couldn’t do much but throw in the occasional leg-slapping beat if the song called for it, but Tim & Adam turned out some truly…remarkable stuff. And by remarkable, I mean batshit insane. One song was described as “freestyle open-verse nebulous note lyrical associative disenchanted lyricism”, another was a country stomp, and there was even an attempt at Bee-Gees style disco. I caught everything on tape, and labeled the tape “Coniption Fit”. Yes, I know now that I misspelled “conniption”.

Adam and I went back to work on my Dad’s farm that summer after the camp, bringing the tape back with us, and listening to it almost daily as we descended into fits of laughter. That was our last summer working together, I think, and we soon graduated from high school and went our separate. From then on, as a matter of course, after each year or before each big move, I would throw out anything that I didn’t use or care about, but I always kept that tape. I kept it through four years at Dalhousie, then brought it to Toronto, to three different apartments, even after I no longer had anything that could play tapes, always meaning to convert it to CD (or, more recently, MP3). I never got around to it.

Then, last month, when my other brother was visiting, he mentioned that he could do it for me. I handed over the tape, and not long after he sent the converted wav file. I listened to it a few days ago, for the first time in years, and felt 16 again. Not that I enjoyed being 16; I disliked it intensely. But the memory of those two weeks is one of my happiest.

So thanks, Tim & Adam, for making something so hilarious with me in the room. Thanks, Andrew, for rescuing it for me. Here’s to friends and brothers, and better yet, the combination of the two.

[tags]brothers, friends, summer rock, halifax, dalhousie, coniption fit[/tags]

The sweet, dry hereafter

My wife, bored of writing about the condo only every few months, has set up a new blog with the intention of recounting more of her adventures (and TV watching habits, presumably). She’s also graduated to a real blog software: WordPress. Go say hello, ever’body.

.:.

Today, as I hurried toward Summerhill station to escape the rain, I walked by Atom Egoyan and his wife Arsinée Khanjian (at least, I assume it was her; I didn’t get a good look) who’d ducked under some cover. They are both very tiny.

[tags]nelliedee, atom egoyan, arsinee khanjian[/tags]