Justifying torture
April 27th, 2009My friend Hoyt Hilsman suggests we waterboard Sean Hannity.
My friend Hoyt Hilsman suggests we waterboard Sean Hannity.

Click here for some photos of the abandoned house that Steve Jobs has owned — and hated — since 1984. He wants to tear it down and — perhaps in the spirit of the times — build a new, smaller mansion.
Some of these pictures remind me of the state my then-girlfriend (now wife) found our apartment in one a.m. after an infamous party. After bidding six or so of us farewell at 6:30 p.m., she came home from work at 6:30 a.m. and discovered us still up drinking and unmoved, the apartment trashed, and a stick of butter mysteriously adhered of its own power halfway up the kitchen wall. Jobs has only skunks and rain to worry about; we had musicians and gamers.
Just got my renewal order form for Portfolio magazine.
Four hours after Conde Nast announced they were shutting down the magazine.
I don’t think I’ll renew.
390 Degrees of Simulated Stereo was the first Pere Ubu album I bought — and I bought it on vinyl. I remember slapping that onto the turntable in the house that I shared with my then-girlfriend (now wife) shared in Ocean City and getting absolutely blown away by the sonic roar that came from the speakers. I have that album on CD now too, but the impact isn’t the same. So I do understand the allure of vinyl, and some of the possible causes for its apparent rise from the grave, as documented in this piece from the LA Times. But let’s take a moment to remember why some of us were so glad to get to cassette tapes (and then CDs, and then digital files):
No, I was glad to see cassette tapes arrive, and even gladder for CD’s. To me, this vinyl craze is yet another reminder that the past wasn’t that golden, and some of us are glad to have left it behind.

With apologies to “I Have no Mouth, and I Must Scream,” The New Beverly Cinema is hosting a Harlan Ellison festival for the next week. I’ll be out of town, but that doesn’t mean you should miss it. I’m posting the schedule above — the festival is mostly made up of Ellison’s favorite films, things he thinks you should watch, lending further credence to his viewpoint that it’s his world and we’re just visitors in it.
Ellison made an early and probably deleterious impact on my writing, which I’ve yet to fully scrub out. Viewing just the trailer for his autobiographical self-produced documentary, below, reminds me why I stopped reading him almost 25 years ago. The only thing less self-indulgent than his writing was his self. (Reason number two was that I got tired of an ongoing feud via printed letters that we had for a couple of years.) (Reason number three was the zealotry of his acolytes; I almost got into a fistfight at a Directors Guild screening about 20 years ago when I had the temerity to venture to the friend of a friend that Ellison is, well, an asshole.)
Judge for yourself:
The grandfather of my friend Hoyt Hilsman was a POW held by the Japanese during World War II. As Hoyt writes in The Huffington Post, it’s important to investigate what happens under torture policies, even when they’re government-ordered. (Especially when it’s our government.)
That didn’t take long. After hearing from everybody who reads this blog (as well as others), California State Speaker Karen Bass has cancelled the pay raises for Assembly staffers. Seems these raises had become a “distraction” while she was campaigning for passage of all the propositions the state now needs to balance its budget. I wonder just how many votes she lost today. Message to the Speaker: Welcome to the 24-minute news cycle.
Push-up men’s underwear, the “Wonderbra for Men.”
Here’s an interactive map that helps you figure your carbon footprint.
My daily commute, annualized, is 352. Take that, Al Gore.