It's been an all-over-the-map week, what with Todd Akin's version of human reproductive science, Phyllis Diller passing and Prince Harry showing us he has nothing to hide in Vegas.
So I'll close it out by crabbing about KQED, the local public television station, which is having at least its third two-week pledge drive of the year. The last one (which actually lasted three weeks) was...last month.
They haul out the same tired, old war horses of [insert field of expertise here] [insert guru here] standing on a carpeted stage before a small studio audience, yakking about one topic or another that's supposed to make your skin look younger, fix your financial future, heal traumatic experiences and maybe make a concert pianist out of you.
Although if those talks didn't have the desired effects last month I don't know why they'd work this time.
There are also concerts of doo-wop, folk, big band and pre-pubescent singers.
The one common denominator is that every one of them is extended ten minutes in every half-hour with those bleeding pledge breaks.
I just wonder how successful they can be at raising money if they're hitting up their supporters on average every six weeks? Plus, the more time they devote to pledge drive, the less programming they actually have to pay for, so I wonder where all the dosh is going?
Friday, August 24, 2012
Thursday, August 23, 2012
The full Harry
Apparently the third-in-line to the British throne lost his shirt in Vegas.
Also his trousers and his pants and his socks.
The good news is that Prince Harry still has his health. Obviously.
Also his trousers and his pants and his socks.
The good news is that Prince Harry still has his health. Obviously.
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Funny lady
We lost another pioneering giant-in-her-field this
week. Phyllis Diller died Monday at age 95. Like Julia Child, Diller was a
woman who found her calling somewhat late, but once discovered she jumped in all
the way. And we were the better for it.
Diller succeeded in a field that was not just
dominated by men, it was exclusively inhabited by them. Her comedy routines were
the 1950s showbiz equivalent of a woman wearing the eye-popping green jacket of
the Augusta National Golf Club.
Oh, wait…
Actually, since she made a point of covering up her
good looks with seriously ugly clothes and fright-wig platinum, teased hair,
that green jacket might have been a good prop for her.
She also cracked masses of one-liners deprecating
her domestic abilities (she was actually quite the gourmet cook), her fashion
sense (“I used to work as a lampshade at a whorehouse. I couldn’t get one of
the good jobs"), her husband (okay—that one was deserved) and everything she
encountered. She refused to be out-cracked by any male comic, and she
prevailed.
Because of her relentless resilience, women are now
able to stride the boards pretty much at parity with the funny men.
Without wearing a butt-ugly green jacket.
I’ll leave you with a few of my favorite
dillerisms:
“I was the world’s ugliest baby. When I was born,
the doctor slapped everybody.”
“The
only thing domestic about me is I was born in this country.”
“They
say housework can’t kill you, but why take the chance?”
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
A woman's place
In light of the recent pronouncement by Republican
senatorial candidate Todd Akin (currently a Congressmoron from Missouri serving
on the Committee on Science, Space and Technology, although he seems to
believe that the sun revolves around the flat earth) on how the human
female reproductive system works, it occurred to me that I need to consider
places in comparison to which the United States doesn’t come out looking like the
worst collection on the planet of utter nincompoops WRT women’s issues.
So I turned to Foreign
Policy’s maps of the Worst
Places to Be a Woman.
Didn’t make me feel any better to consider the
condition of women around the world, but it did take my mind off the jaw-dropping
posturing of one scumbag who represents the medieval mentality that is only
slowly being chipped away—in some places more than others.
Monday, August 20, 2012
Sunnyvale sights, Part 3
So, last month I shared a photo of a produce
delivery truck and pointed out that the company didn’t seem to have
grasped the whole URL thing.
Literally—they didn’t have an entire URL, which is
really odd in this particular area, because you are what you Web, and if you
don’t have an online presence, you’re not really real.
Well, the other day I encountered another of the
company’s trucks and was pleased to note that they finally have got the full
web address:
I’ve got to say that they’ve certainly got their money’s worth
out of that domain name.