Musings of the Great Eric

The interesting, the amazing, and some stuff only I would ever care about


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The Flintstones… brought to you by Winston Cigarettes

This is kind of amazing. Tpday we think of The Flintstones as a kid’s show, but when it launched it was actually targetted at adults - which really shows how far our culture has moved in the last 40 years (It was actually the first series to show a man and his wife sharing a bed). It’s interesting then, that although TV content was so tightly regulated in the 60’s, this is the kind of advertising that supported it:


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Posted in Pop Culture at July 16th, 2006 at 8:37 pm by Eric | 0 Comments

Teenage T-Rex had it rough

For Tyrannosaurs, Teen Years Were Murder

If they survived the deadly toddler years, tyrannosaurs apparently had it pretty cushy, at least until they hit dinosaur puberty.

But after these dinosaurs reached sexual maturity, life’s harsher realities kicked in again. Beginning at about age 14, tyrannosaurs suffered death rates of nearly 23 percent a year, according to a new study.

Threatened by disease, combat, and the stress of mating or raising offspring, most adults were lucky to hit their early 20s, the study says.

And just 2 percent “lived long enough to attain their maximal size and age” in their late 20s, the study authors write.

On top of that, adult Tyrannosaurs would never let their teenagers borrow the car.

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Posted in Science at July 16th, 2006 at 2:54 pm by Eric | 0 Comments

Gender differences in academia, through the eyes of a transgendered person

This is fascinating:

Ben Barres has a distinct edge over the many others who have joined the debate about whether men’s brains are innately better suited for science than women’s. He doesn’t just make an abstract argument about the similarities and differences between the genders; he has lived as both.

Barres’ experience as a female-to-male transgendered person led him to write a pointed commentary in the July 13 issue of Nature rebuking the comments of former Harvard University president Lawrence Summers that raised the possibility that the dearth of women in the upper levels of science is rooted in biology. Marshalling scientific evidence as well as drawing from personal experience, Barres maintained that, contrary to Summers’ remarks, the lack of women in the upper reaches of research has more to do with bias than aptitude.

Where Summers sees innate differences, Barres sees discrimination. As a young woman—Barbara—he said he was discouraged from setting his sights on MIT, where he ended up receiving his bachelor’s degree. Once there, he was told that a boyfriend must have solved a hard math problem that he had answered and that had stumped most men in the class. After he began living as a man in 1997, Barres overheard another scientist say, “Ben Barres gave a great seminar today, but his work is much better than his sister’s work.”

One can’t argue that he has a unique perspective on the gender divide issue. The whole article is a pretty interesting read.

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Posted in Science, Politics at July 16th, 2006 at 11:07 am by Eric | 0 Comments

Evangelist “Dr. Dino” arrested

Kent Hovind: Evangelist arrested on federal charges

A Pensacola evangelist who owns the defunct Dinosaur Adventure Land in Pensacola was arrested Thursday on 58 federal charges, including failing to pay $473,818 in employee-related taxes and making threats against investigators.

Of the 58 charges, 44 were filed against Kent Hovind and his wife, Jo, for evading bank reporting requirements as they withdrew $430,500 from AmSouth Bank between July 20, 2001, and Aug. 9, 2002.

Kent Hovind, who often calls himself “Dr. Dino,” has been sparring with the IRS for at least 17 years on his claims that he is employed by God, receives no income, has no expenses and owns no property.

“The debtor apparently maintains that as a minister of God, everything he owns belongs to God and he is not subject to paying taxes to the United States on money he receives for doing God’s work,” U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Lewis Killian Jr. wrote when he dismissed a claim from Hovind in 1996.

Hovind, an avowed creationist, has widely publicized his “standing offer” to pay $250,000 to anyone who can provide scientific evidence of evolution.

But, understand, he’s a “good Christian”. Neither Jesus nor Paul nor anyone in the old testament ever said anything about tax fraud being a sin.

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Posted in Politics, Atheism at July 16th, 2006 at 10:18 am by Eric | 0 Comments

Japanese commercial for Legend of Zelda

I’m speechless.

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Posted in Irreverant, Games at July 15th, 2006 at 8:22 pm by Eric | 0 Comments

Businessman get negative portrayals on primetime drama

For American Businessmen, Primetime is Crimetime:

The classic family man like insurance salesman Jim Anderson (played by Robert Young) on “Father Knows Best” has turned into the ruthless CEO. Entertainment television now shows businessmen as cheats, liars, philanderers and criminals. In a study of top-rated dramas during the “sweeps” months of May and November 2005, the Media Research Center’s Business & Media Institute (BMI) found that the networks advanced a largely negative view of both the American businessman and the very idea of business.

Along with widespread crime, the workplace was little more than an expensive Monday-to-Friday dating service. The 40-hour workweek was rife with immorality and dishonesty. And it didn’t stop with the openly negative. There was little positive, as well. Businessmen rarely helped solve society’s problems through their skill or dedication. Of the 12 shows BMI studied, only one, NBC’s “Las Vegas” – set ironically in the notorious “Sin City” – offered narratives in which businessmen confronted challenges with skill and creativity instead of murder or sex.

These 15 episodes shared a common thread. Each fit a dramatic template that pitted detectives, district attorneys and other agents of a just government against vulgar businessmen willing to do anything or kill anyone to gain power. With the exception of NBC’s “Las Vegas,” no major plotline in the study sample featured businessmen furthering the interests of society through their work ethic or creativity. On primetime television, the presence of businessmen ran counter to ethical behavior, almost at the same pace as hardened career criminals.

Really, I can’t imagine why anyone would think that the presence of a businessman is counter to ethical behavior. Where ever could such a stereotype have come from? Certainly, I can’t imagine one single instance of a corporation or businessman going against the interests of society in the real world. Obviously, these primetime dramas are just making shit up wholesale.

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Posted in Politics at July 15th, 2006 at 4:50 pm by Eric | 0 Comments

Caption Contest!

Alright folks, have it it!

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Posted in Politics at July 14th, 2006 at 7:07 pm by Eric | 0 Comments

You paying attention Sony?

The rise and fall of Sega: from the eyes of Tom Kalinske:

Sega was a company that had it all. They were beating Nintendo at the hardware game, consumers thought their software offerings were more grown up, and the money was rolling in. Then they made some bad hardware decisions (32X, we’re talking about you) and lost it all.

Sound like anyone *cough*Sony*cough* in the video game scene currently?

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Posted in Games at July 14th, 2006 at 4:59 pm by Eric | 0 Comments

RIAA loses!

RIAA Case Against Mother Dismissed With Prejudice; Court May Award Attorneys Fees Against RIAA

In Capitol Records v. Foster, in federal court in Oklahoma, a case against a mother — whose only connection to the alleged filesharing was that she was the person who paid for the internet access — has been dismissed with prejudice.

W00t!

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Posted in Copyright DRM and Media at July 14th, 2006 at 7:23 am by Eric | 0 Comments

What the fuck is wrong with people?

Ken Lay’s memorial attracts power elite

Houston’s political and business leaders, including former President George H.W. Bush, turned out for Kenneth Lay’s memorial service Wednesday, less than a week after the Enron founder’s sudden death.

That’s actually par for the course; one wouldn’t expect the Bush’s to have morals. Here’s the fucked up part:

The Reverend Dr. Bill Lawson compared Lay with civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. and Jesus Christ, and said his name would eventually be cleared.

“He was taken out of the world right at the right time,” he said. “History has a way of vindicating people who have been wronged.”

Yes, you read that right. I can only imagine his goal was to make people’s heads explode.

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Posted in Politics at July 13th, 2006 at 3:18 pm by Eric | 1 Comment

My guess for 2008

This guy will get the Democratic nomination and win the Presidency.

Former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner (D) has ramped up his fundraising for congressional Democratic incumbents and challengers, signaling a national organizing strategy to position the centrist Southerner for a White House bid in 2008.

I really hate talking about something that’s two years out where a lot can happen before then, and there’s a more important election between now and then. But I will anyway. Here’s my analysis for 2008:

The Republican party is in a pickle because their strongest candidates (the ones who’d fair best in a general election) are unpalatable to the religious right - this includes McCain and Guliani. I don’t think either of them can survive the party’s primary process. The Dobson faction of the party, which is currently dominant and getting entirely too extreme will only tolerate a similarly extreme candidate. I don’t know who that will be as of yet, but it’s unlikely to be anyone who’s palatable to the general population.

In the main election, the Republican party in general will be saddled with a deeply unpopular war and a lame duck incumbant. Anyone strongly associated with either (and few Republicans aren’t) will have an uphill battle.

So the election is the Democrat’s to lose. Which they will if they nominate Hillary, and I think most Dems realize that. I also think that the democrats suffer a deficit of leadership right now. Al Gore has a shot; but I think he has too much baggage to prevail. I don’t think democrats will make another hasty choice as they did with Kerry. They, unlike the Republicans, will be vetting candidates for how well they’ll fare in the general election. Given the current distaste the public has with the status quo, I don’t think it’ll be any now-prominent Democrats.

Enter Mark Warner. A relative unknown on the national scene, but one with a lot of good will. He’s a successful former Governor of a southern red state. He’s charismatic. I think ultimately, he’s the most likely to run and win.

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Posted in Politics at July 13th, 2006 at 1:05 pm by Eric | 0 Comments

Jon Stewart on Ted Stevens and the Internet

Stewart is brilliant as always:


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Posted in Technology, Politics at July 13th, 2006 at 10:36 am by Eric | 0 Comments

Microsoft and Yahoo beta-test IM interoperability

From Microsoft:

Yahoo! Inc. (Nasdaq: “YHOO”) and Microsoft Corp. (Nasdaq: “MSFT”) today will begin limited public beta testing of interoperability between their instant messaging (IM) services that enable users of Windows Live® Messenger, the next generation of MSN® Messenger, and Yahoo!® Messenger with Voice to connect with each other. This interoperability — the first of its kind between two distinct, global consumer IM providers — will form the world’s largest consumer IM community, approaching 350 million accounts.

Call me unimpressed.

All this succeeds in doing is creating a larger proprietary network - we’re still locked in to one client or the other, and frankly both are bloated peices of crap. (Yes, I know that there’s things like iChat, Trillian, and Gaim - but none of these are officially supported).

When they officially support IM federation via Jabber or some other open protocol, then I’ll be impressed. Choosing an IM client should be no different than choosing an email client; wake me up when we finally get to that point.

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Posted in Technology at July 13th, 2006 at 10:28 am by Eric | 0 Comments

Are they just crafty investors? Or…

Just corrupt sons of bitches?

In stock market, US senators beat averages

The study found that during the boom years of 1993-98, a majority of US Senators were trading stocks - and beating the market by 12 percentage points a year on average. By comparison, corporate insiders beat the market by 5 percent, and typical households underperformed by 1.4 percent.

Financial experts interviewed for this story say the senators’ collective achievement is a statistical stunner, too big to be a mere coincidence.

But in America’s premier lawmaking body, few members divest themselves of assets upon assuming public office or hold their investments in “blind trusts.” Unlike other federal employees, members of Congress are not required to recuse themselves when they have a financial interest in an issue they are legislating. And their required financial disclosure statements - which were used as the basis of the new study - are hardly as transparent as the public might expect.

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Posted in Politics at July 13th, 2006 at 10:09 am by Eric | 0 Comments

What’s the sexiest thing ever created?

If you said anything other than “Princess Leia’s Metal Bikini”, you’re wrong.

There’s no doubt that the sight of Carrie Fisher in the gold sci-fi swimsuit was burned into the sweaty subconscious of a generation of fanboys hitting puberty in the spring of 1983. But, remarkably, it’s women for whom the costume holds the most enduring meaning today.

“I saw the movie when I was seven and I was absolutely thrilled by Leia — what a wonderful character,” says Amira Sa’id, a dancer who has used a Leia bikini in her performances. “Jabba put her into the outfit to humiliate her, but Leia was such a strong character, her will made the costume empowering.”

The website, Leia’s Metal Bikini, features over a hundred female fans who model the costume, ranging from some who could almost pass for Fisher, to others who look nothing like the actress. Many weren’t even born when the movie came out. Another site offers instructions on making your own costume, which involves finding a “Leia-shaped person” and plastering her torso with modeling clay.

Hell’s yeah.

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Posted in Pop Culture at July 13th, 2006 at 7:46 am by Eric | 0 Comments

How many before it’s a conspiracy?

Enron witness found dead in park:

A body found in north-east London has been identified as that of a banker who was questioned by the FBI about the Enron fraud case.

Police said they were treating the death in Chingford of Neil Coulbeck, who worked for the Royal Bank of Scotland until 2004, as “unexplained”.

Two deaths associated with Enron in barely a week. Coincidence?

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Posted in Politics at July 12th, 2006 at 8:57 pm by Eric | 0 Comments

Lewis Black: Badass

Just watch what he does on CNN:


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Posted in Irreverant at July 12th, 2006 at 8:54 pm by Eric | 0 Comments

Frequently awkward questions for the entertainment industry

From the EFF. A couple of gems:

The RIAA has sued over 20,000 music fans for file sharing, who have on average paid a $3,750 settlement. That’s over $75,000,000. Has any money collected from your lawsuits gone to pay actual artists? Where’s all that money going?

Major entertainment companies have repeatedly brought lawsuits to block new technologies, including the VCR, Digital Audio Tape recorders, the first MP3 player, the ReplayTV PVR, and now P2P software. Why is your industry so hostile to new technologies?

DRM has clearly failed to stop songs from getting on file sharing networks, but it does prevent me from moving lawfully purchased music onto my iPod and other portable devices. Unlike the major record labels, many popular indie labels offer mp3 downloads through sites like eMusic. Why won’t you let fans purchase mp3s as well?

The major movie studios have been enjoying some of their most profitable years in history over the past five years. Can you cite to any specific studies that prove noncommercial file sharing among fans, as opposed to commercial DVD piracy, has hurt the studios’ bottom line in any significant way?

I suspect answers will be a long time coming though.

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Posted in Copyright DRM and Media at July 12th, 2006 at 2:31 pm by Eric | 0 Comments

MySpace may face legislative crackdown

During a hearing before a House of Representatives subcommittee, politicians argued over the merits of compelling schools and libraries to cordon off access to social-networking sites, requiring some form of an Internet ID that would prove a person’s age, or doing nothing at the moment.

My favorite quote from the article:

“MySpace.com has been a center of drug activity, of gang activity, and of Internet predators,” said Rep. Mark Kirk, an Illinois Republican. “Isn’t it entirely appropriate that the state get involved?”

Entirely appropriate! Hahaha! Oh, that’s good.

This one was a runner up:

“If we could save one child, then it’s worth it–that one child, that innocent child who may fall prey during the school hours because the legislation wasn’t enacted,” said David Zellis, an assistant district attorney in Bucks County, Penn., who testified at the hearing.

The root password to the constitution is “Think of the children”.

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Posted in Technology, Politics at July 12th, 2006 at 8:10 am by Eric | 0 Comments

White House Salaries

Who’s Making What In The White House:

President Bush’s most senior aides — the ones who hold the coveted title of “assistant to the president” — recently received a $4,200 cost-of-living bump-up in compensation and now earn a top pay rate of $165,200, according to an internal White House list of staff salaries. The list was compiled by the administration for the year that ended June 30 and is displayed both alphabetically, and by dollar ranking, below. Those at the bottom of the White House staff pay scale — the folks answering phones and responding to the president’s mail, for example — remain stuck at last year’s pay floor of $30,000, according to a year-to-year comparison of White House data obtained by National Journal.

At that level, the White House aide who keeps a log of the gifts sent to the president makes about as much as the average starting pay for a public school teacher. At $15 an hour, that’s almost three times the national minimum wage of $5.15. (Congress is debating this summer whether to raise the minimum wage, while the administration prefers to leave it where it is).

The words you’re looking for are “fucking” and “jackasses”.

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Posted in Politics at July 12th, 2006 at 7:39 am by Eric | 0 Comments
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