Back from the beyond

Category: words mean things (Page 86 of 223)

Student loans

I predict that after Sarah and Frenchie, “I only did it to pay off my student loans” will become the catch-all excuse in American culture.

ROBERT BLAKE: I needed my wife’s insurance money to pay off my student loans.

BUSH: I didn’t want to invade Iraq, but I had all these student loans to pay off. Yale and Harvard don’t come cheap, you know.

CYBILL SHEPHERD: Student loans. Need I say more?

My fame knows no bounds

My fame knows no bounds

FROM: Sparx443@wmconnect.com
TO: adam@lucky8ball.com

SUBJECT: aRE YOU KKINDA LIKE A VOODOO DOLL???

Dear lucky 8 ball,
are you like an internet voodoo doll?And what does yuor website have to do on it????And how did you get the name?

$omeone you dont know,
BlaBlaBla

FightingBob.com

Perhaps contrary to yesterday’s entry, I do have a rather large web project launching today: FightingBob.com, an online magazine dealing with Wisconsin politics from a progressive perspective. It’s not large in terms of content – not yet – but it could eventually be the most-read site I’ve ever designed. I’m not involved on the editorial side at all, but I think there’s definitely a market out there (in Madison, at least) for this brand of political news and activism.

Let me know what you think.

Incredibly busy

My friend Caitlin Skinner, who is helping me with marketing my web design services, gave me the best advice the other day. I’ve been a little down that business has been incredibly slow, and I don’t see a lot of jobs on the horizon. She said whenever I talk to anyone about my business, I should say how incredibly busy and happy I am – no matter how much of a lie that is. And it makes sense: people want to hire someone who is busy, not someone who can’t find work. So I’m going to try it out on you guys. Ready?

You: So Adam, how’s business?

Me: I’m really busy. Things are fantastic. I’m always looking for new opportunities, though.

…so did you buy it?

The West Wing is back

This season of “The West Wing” has been scattershot at best. They seemed to be all over the place, too cutesy at times (like the whole inauguration Bible episode) or too complex and elliptical at other times.

Well, as of last night, they’re back, baby. In a big way. So much so that I actually enjoyed seeing Sam Seaborn again – and that’s saying something. Funny, sharp, topical, focused. I hope they can keep it up.

‘Daredevil’ review

Daredevil

“Daredevil” suffers mostly from failure to commit. If you’re going to make a superhero movie, you need to decide whether you’re making “Batman” or “Unbreakable.” If you want to be campy and wild and unrealistic, run with it. If you want to show a hero who hurts and doubts and lives in the same world we all live in, so be it. But you can’t have it both ways.

“Daredevil” also suffers from poor casting. Ben Affleck is one of the most impassive stars working today, so it’s probably best not to cast him as a blind man whose face is mostly covered in a mask. And Jennifer Garner is sweet and charming and charismatic in her own way, but she just can’t pull off the vengeful assassin her character becomes (if any actress could, given that the transformation takes all of five minutes of screen time).

For all its problems, I can’t say I was bored watching this movie. Colin Farrell, for his part, definitely commits to the craziness of Bullseye. (I agree with John and Matt that Farrell would have been quite good in Affleck’s role.) Jon Favreau gets off some great lines as the requisite sidekick. And there are quite a few nice touches, including some cool “radar sense” footage to show you what Matt Murdock’s world looks like. But it’s just not enough to hang a movie on, much less a franchise.

Blog stuff

Blog stuff

1. Congratulations to Evan Williams on sale of Blogger to Google. Blogger, while maddening, is the magical application that got me into this weblog mess in the first place, and for that I will be eternally grateful. Can’t wait to see how things shake out with this.

2. I have similar respect for Ben and Mena Trott and Movable Type. MT is flexible and great for multiple-author, multiple-weblog setups. But now that I’ve been spending some real time with the application (I’m building a site for a friend), I find the interface to be almost perversely complex at times.

An example: to add an author to a weblog, you have to exit out of editing that specific weblog, go to “Add/Edit Blog Authors,” choose the existing author from a dropdown, submit, scroll down to the bottom of the page, select the weblog from a dropdown, and submit.

Ben and Mena: How about just having a list of authors and an author dropdown on the main weblog editing page? Just a thought.

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