Profile

toastykitten: (Default)
toastykitten

June 2025

S M T W T F S
123 45 67
891011121314
15161718192021
2223 2425262728
2930     

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
toastykitten: (Default)
Once again, The Smoking Gun is an awesome news source. They broke the news that the LA Times "Pulitzer-prize winner Chuck Phillips" was duped by some white guy in prison over P. Diddy's involvement in Tupac Shakur's death. The LA Times had to apologize this morning, and there may be a lawsuit.

Unrelated, but relevant: Via Maud Newton - Chris Lehmann on "Victim 'Hood" and Tayari Jones' "There's A Sucker Born Every Minute".

For my artsy friends: Adobe Photoshop Express Beta is free (for now) - you get 2 gigs of space for your photos. Woohoo!

Tonight I go see Jennifer 8. Lee at Pasadena's Vroman's, where she's going to be talking about her new book Fortune Cookie Chronicles. It's mostly about how Chinese American food (shocker) isn't really Chinese.
Tags:
Mar. 1st, 2008 08:01 am

of interest

toastykitten: (Default)
Tags:
toastykitten: (Default)
We spent the whole weekend packing. We have some stuff left out for things such as cooking, but overall, the majority is done. Some things I learned: 1. I have even more books and magazines than I thought, 2. we both have a lot of random stuff that doesn't really fit anywhere, 3. moving companies give out very poor-quality tape. In the meantime, during a break from packing, we sat down to watch The Host, a Korean version of Godzilla, and dude, it is infinitely better than Cloverfield. It's charming, funny, heartbreaking, with dysfunctional but lovable characters. It's even got political commentary that isn't annoyingly shoved in your face. Rent it!

(Note: Yay Obama!)

Meanwhile, here's some pretty stuff to check out:

Rust Belt
makes jewelry sourced from re-purposed materials. Environmentally friendly and pretty!
Crybabys Boutique sells some really cute fabric.
Paul & Joe have some lovely desktop wallpaper.
This ring pistol is very cool.

(All taken from NotCot.)
Tags:
toastykitten: (Default)
This weekend was super-busy. Mark is in England for LinuxConf Europe; I had a wedding to attend and my sister and her kids came up for the weekend because she and her husband had a wedding to attend. I stayed with two of my sisters at their house over the weekend to avoid taking any bridges to get to the wedding. I am looking forward to today and not doing much other than cleaning up a little bit. Otherwise, here's a few links you guys might enjoy:

Tags:
toastykitten: (Default)
  • Vibe interview with Obama by Jeff Chang. Part 1 and Part 2. I do not have any particularly coherent thoughts about the Democratic nominees right now (other than I wish they would quit trying to be Republicans).
    • I've got two daughters and it's a challenge for me every day to make sure that they're getting a positive self-image and that they are not being swept up in some of the negative attitudes about girls generally and Black women in particular. Now the main responsibility is with the parents, and I've never supported censorship as a strategy to deal with this. But I think it's something that we can all talk about. And so I think that some in the hip-hop community immediately assumed, I guess based on press reports they heard, instead of reading my actual statements, that I had targeted them out by themselves, and others assumed that I was trying to score cheap political points. (re: don imus shit)
  • Everything you wanted to know about street gangs.
    • Q: How do you define a gang?

      A: Great question. There are a few important legal cases where prosecutors tried to prosecute college fraternities as “gangs.” They suggested that the fraternity was an organization that existed to promote criminal behavior, such as the abuse of women and underage drinking. Most judges threw these cases out because they thought that fraternities were not, by definition, “gangs.” But judges rarely gave a logical reason for excluding (typically white) fraternities from the “gang category.”

Tags:
toastykitten: (Default)
Someday I will write a real post.

Last week we went to the ER twice. Mark is fine now, and was diagnosed with a bacterial infection and given extra antibiotics. We weren't reassured by the doctor's "worst-case scenario - it might be Chrohn's disease or colitis". In fact, I'm sort of frustrated that we're in 2007 now and medicine is mostly guessing until you get it right. I'm not saying that our doctors sucked; they were doing the best with the information they had, but still. A little certainty would go a long way, is all I'm saying.

More aggravating was the fact that we actually bought groceries and planned to cook last week, but because of the above, didn't get to do much of it. My mom was sweet, though, and made me bring Mark some soup and "wife cookies". No, I have no idea why they're called that. I went home for dinner on Saturday and she practically kicked me out of the house right after, telling me I had to take care of him. (I bet Mark just looooves that.)

I've been working on my eHub articles and part of that is reviewing different sites. Doing this, as fun as it is, is still annoying sometimes, especially when I have to deal with a website that does stupid things - for example, instead of writing out their features in plain old text, advise you to watch a video, or linking to an "about" page that is non-existent, or my very biggest pet peeve - charge money for things that are now standard to give away for free. If I can get what you are offering for free somewhere else, why wouldn't I go somewhere else?

Today my train was delayed due to a person being struck by another train. According to what we heard, it was a probable suicide. Which is awful.

I will write about New York later. Still have to work on other stuff first. Some links of interest to me, and maybe to you:

Remember that tasering incident in UCLA? UCLA's campus police decided to taser some kid because he had no ID, and there was an internal investigation that found no fault with the campus police. However, there was another investigation and this time found that the officer violated "use of force" policies. via Metafilter.

Daniel Wu's blog is still going. This time he writes about the destruction of the Queen's Pier. I have a soft spot for him because he went to school in Oakland. I mean, true, it was Head-Royce, one of the best private schools around, but still. Oakland!

I am with John Scalzi on the creation of a union for bloggers - WTF? First, who are you going to bargain with? Actually in the comments it's noted that the original person who talked about it was actually trying to figure out ways for bloggers to get health insurance. But still, unless blogging is your sole source of income (in which case you need to start looking for another job) maybe you should just look at the stuff that's already out there.

New York's deliverymen sue their employers.
toastykitten: (Default)
  • Reminder - Bay Bridge to shut down during Labor Day. Just in case you were thinking of actually going somewhere. Last year, it took me nearly two hours to go home to Oakland to see my family. It is normally a 45 minute drive.
  • Trailer for Lust, Caution. Tony Leung Chiu-Wai. Ang Lee. Joan Chen. Love, betrayal, murder, Shanghai! How could you not fall in love with it?
  • Babies eating lemons:

  • My mom gave me another giant zucchini from her garden - it's as long as my entire arm, and about five inches wide. So I am collecting zucchini recipes.
  • Linux - not just for servers anymore - in case anyone is wondering, yes I still love Ubuntu. It works great; that one bug I have that has been identified for over a year, though, still hasn't been fixed. I can use my iPod, write in OpenOffice, which I prefer to MSWord anyway, browse the web, do everything I did in Windows XP except faster! And without the Blue Screen of Death.
  • Uniqlo's fall look book.
toastykitten: (Default)
  • In response to the scandal of the Shanxi brick-kiln slaves, lawyer and activist Wu Ge (吴革) has submitted a proposed amendment to the Criminal Law defining and criminalizing slavery.
  • A recipe for okonomiyaki, courtesy of the Chronicle Books blog. Chronicle Books is one of my favorite publishers - whoever does the design for their books (many people, I imagine) are geniuses. It also helps that many of their books look really interesting and informative. I love okonomiyaki, and I wish there were a Japanese restaurant close by that served it. It looks like it's probably really easy to make.
  • Jackie Chan set to appear in drama set in Japan - a drama on the lives of Chinese immigrants in Japan's Shinjuku district. Uh, no comment for now.
  • Thank you, Jeff Yang: A Taste of Racism in the Chinese Food Scare - Nevertheless, China has been portrayed as a nation blind to hygiene and blissfully unconcerned about recent reports of food contamination. That's troubling, because it reinforces the notion that befouled food is the consequence of a foul culture. Chef and gustatory adventurer Anthony Bourdain may have said it best in a 2006 Salon interview in which he noted that there's "something kind of racist" about culinary xenophobia: "Fear of dirt is often indistinguishable from the fear of unnamed dirty people." Link from Serious Eats.
  • I cut my hand on my dad's butcher knife today. When I moved out, my parents gave me that knife. It is a dangerous thing - it's really heavy, and it's been dinged over the years, so much so that there isn't a straight line anywhere. You know how in Chinatown you go into the little shops with the ducks hanging in the windows? And there's the guy behind the counter chopping your roast pork and roast duck into pieces with simple, beautiful whomps? That's my knife. I hardly ever use the knife, but I took it out to slice some turnips the other day. My chef's knife just wasn't cutting it. It wasn't exactly going through things like butter, but I pounded the hell out of that thing. I'm telling you, my knife will cut through just about anything. I almost feel like a real cook with it.
  • Currently reading: Connie Willis' science fiction novel Doomsday Book - it is surprisingly engaging. I'm almost done with it, and I'm pleasantly surprised. I wasn't really expecting anything except a diversion, but it's got time travel into the Middle Ages and a spunky heroine. (I'm not a fan of the word "spunky", but I'm not sure what else works.) One thing I did notice - people spend a lot of time trying to get hold of people via the phone, and for the longest time, I was like, dude, does the future not have cell phones and the Internet? I flipped to the copyright page, and discovered it was published in the early nineties. So that explains it!
toastykitten: (Default)
  • How Sassy Changed My Life - The book blog. My mom once brought home stacks and stacks of magazines that a friend's daughter was throwing out, which included a bunch of old Sassys and Seventeens. I devoured them, and still have a bit of nostalgia for the Sassys. I think we probably threw them out at some point. I don't have the same kind of insane devotion that other people dig, but I remember it introducing me to Digable Planets and Cute Band Alerts and unusually honest interviews, including the infamous one where they totally dissed that chick who played Kelly on Saved by the Bell. Now that Jane magazine has folded, it seems like it's the end of something - I'm not sure what.
  • Fashion sales:
  • Sort of obsessing over the Katie Couric stuff.
toastykitten: (Default)
  • I'm now a contributing editor to Emily Chang's eHub site, which is a web 2.0 resource. You know how you've been hearing about how great Twitter is and stuff like that? That's her site, except she focuses on those tools and stuff that don't really get covered in BoingBoing. I've found a lot of useful sites through her, and I feel really excited about this. I am very flattered that she chose me to be an editor, especially when some of the others have been working directly in the industry for years and are older than me. The other editors are from all corners of the globe, and it's been really great working with them as well. This doesn't really change anything I write here, but the writing I'm contributing to eHub will be more polished.
  • One of my friends asked if I wanted to do a group blog with him. Which I probably will as soon as he gets it up.
  • Sicko got reposted on Google Video and is still up, apparently. Mark and I just watched it, and are now thoroughly depressed. Any further commentary will have to be friends-only.
  • This Film is Not Yet Rated is also posted on Google Video. Links taken from Fimoculous, which is a great links blog. We were going to watch it this week but we watched Sicko instead.
  • Found out that Jane magazine is folding, which I have mixed feelings about. It annoyed me to no end, but I couldn't help picking it up on a bad day after work and just flipping through it on the train.
Jul. 7th, 2007 04:00 pm

pixar links

toastykitten: (Default)
Unsurprisingly, I loved Ratatouille. Pixar wins again for story, animation, characters, comedy, drama. It's all good, and gorgeous, making my mouth water. Anyway, I found some stuff on the Internet to share - hope you guys like it, too.

The Onion Interview with Brad Bird.

Animation World Magazine profile of Brad Bird and how he got Iron Giant made.

Youtube Ratatouille page.

Patton Oswalt on Geeks vs. Nerds. (He plays D&D.)

GreenCine roundup on Ratatouille.

toastykitten: (Default)
Just read:

Roger Ebert's I Hated, Hated, Hated This Movie - I adore Ebert, but I really do not need him to tell me what he finds erotic. There's a reason why MOST movie critics don't talk about it, Ebert. Anyway, overall, the book was really funny, and mostly well-written. He gets so hung up on logic sometimes, though, that I think he forgets to actually talk about the movie. Who cares what the alien bugs do or don't eat?

Marc Romano's Crossworld: One Man's Journey into America's Crossword Obsession. This book is not about all crosswords, but about one reporter's attendance of a crossword tournament run by Will Shortz, the guy who edits the New York Times puzzles. This is a fluffy and dorky book. I finished it over two train rides, and thought it was okay but not great. At least I found out why I couldn't finish any of the crossword puzzles in one particular book I bought my last year of college. It was probably edited by Eugene Maleska, who was apparently this puzzle editor who didn't like people putting in clues that are relevant after 1960.

Independent Publishing Deathwatch:
My magazine holders are starting to hold a lot of dead magazines. I have the following: Budget Living, Kitchen Sink, Arthur Frommer's Smart Shopping, and now Punk Planet. However, not everything is dead. I would totally subscribe to Monocle, if only it weren't so damn expensive.

Just watched:

John From Cincinnati - I didn't like this first episode much at all; this whole "mysterious stranger changes the lives of a family" felt like it was just trying way too hard to be weird and mysterious. I wasn't buying it.

Top Chef - The first episode seemed promising. I hated Hung, the guy who's friends with Marcel from Season 2. I know they're angling that guy as "person you love to hate", but I just hate him not only for being smug, but for trying too hard to be smug.

Mark playing Nintendo games. So I guess the patents on the games expired? He bought this console thingamajig and bought some games like Zelda to return to his childhood. He has a PS2 and he hasn't touched that in 2 years. But he brought this home last night and it's like he can't stop. It's so cute.

Online:
Virtual China's blog post on child slave labor in China.
Global Voices post on slave labor in Shanxi.
toastykitten: (Default)
I am in a writing mood right now, plus I don't have to go to work today.

Reading:

Maxine Hong Kingston's "The Fifth Book of Peace" - Half fiction, half memoir, this is about Kingston's struggle to find a way out of war and to bring peace to everyone. The book is divided into four sections - Fire, Water, Paper, Earth. Fire is about the Oakland hills fire that destroyed her home right after her father's funeral. Water is a fictionalized account of her time in Hawaii using a character from one of her previous books, Wittman Ah Sing, during the Vietnam war. Wittman is a war resister who evades the draft by flying to Hawaii with his white wife and their mixed-race son, where they meet all sorts of people and encounter the idea of "Sanctuary". I forget where Paper and Earth split off, but these chapters are about the years after the Oakland fire, where Kingston gathers a group of war veterans, mostly from Vietnam, but from Korea and WWII, too to start a writing workshop, so they can write their way out of their pain. I admit, I disliked the Water chapter the most for somewhat irrational reasons. The entire book is well-written; it's just that I prefer reading about Kingston's actual experiences as opposed to her fiction, which seems to me to be thinly veiled autobiography anyway. She mentions that she started the writing workshop for veterans as partly as a way to help her brothers cope with the trauma of war, but they don't come. (It makes me wonder how her brothers felt, fighting in the Vietnam war.) This book was published in 2004, but the workshop had been going on since the original Iraq war. Overall the book is good, but you have to have patience with the way the narrative jumps all over the place, and also when Kingston seems to drop in weird non-sequiturs and then never addresses them again. The workshop's writing has turned into the new book Veterans of War, Veterans of Peace. Excerpts can be read at Bill Moyers Journal website.

I still think from what I've read so far of her writing, that Woman Warrior was her best work. Interestingly, in this book she clarifies what actually happened with her parents when they immigrated here. She felt safe finally telling their stories for real now that they were dead and can't be deported.

Watching:

Top Chef 4 Star All Stars: Top Chef is one of those Project Runway spin-offs that was actually successful. This episode was a one-off before the start of Season 3, and pitted Season 1 against Season 2. It was so funny that the arrogant pricks from each season ended up being the team captains and basically went head-to-head against each other. I do have to say, I liked Stephen a lot more this time around.

Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: There's been some discussion online-the powers-that-be at HBO decided to center the story on a part-white Sioux doctor who marries a white woman, neither of whom actually appear in the work this was based on because "Everyone felt very strongly that we needed a white character or a part-white, part-Indian character to carry a contemporary white audience through this project," Daniel Giat, the writer who adapted the book for HBO Films, told a group of television writers earlier this year. I didn't really read all this stuff going in, but dude, this guy thinks only white people watch HBO? And that white people care only about watching other white people? Talk about low expectations.

I should preface this by saying that I know literally nothing about the Sioux or most Native Americans and their stories. Anyway, although I liked the actor who played Charles Eastman, because he reminded me of a young Chow-Yun-Fat, I thought his story fell kind of flat. There was decent acting in those scenes, but if his entire purpose was to connect the viewer with the rest of the Sioux who were forced from their land, it didn't really work. The story overall was very affecting, and really depressing. I didn't think the film itself, as a stand-alone product was that bad, and it made me want to find out more about the Sioux. Obviously, though, I know nothing about what actually happened or I would be more pissed off, probably. I would argue, though that we didn't get to see enough of the Sioux, and saw too much of the American government.

Pam Noles' post about Bury My Heart.

Statement by Hanay Geiogamah, Professor of Theater, UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television, Director, UCLA American Indian Studies Center - he had some serious issues with it.

Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, the book.

John Tucker Must Die - Teen movie fluff. It was enjoyable and not deep at all, even though we are informed that the main character likes Elvis Costello and Dave Eggers. Introduced me to the stereotype of "vegan is code for slut". When did that happen?
toastykitten: (Default)
Too sleepy to post anything more than the following:

Optimus Prime v. Bonecrusher

Activate interview with Jenni Gainsborough, Washington director of Penal Reform International

on hip-hop, hoes and bitch-ass-niggas - a post on "Hip-Hop and Homophobia: Exploring Masculinity, Bisexuality and the DL." by blackademic Larry D. Lyons II.

Not a lot of love in the Haight - LA Times article about how hippie homeowners wish those damn kids would get off their lawn even though those hippies probably did the same thing 30 years ago.

WANT: Dim sum cell phone charms! Too cute.

Edited to add: Why is it "hoes"? Shouldn't it be "hos"? Someone confirm the spelling rule on this one.
Jun. 1st, 2007 11:49 pm

links

toastykitten: (Default)
I enjoy reading SFist because it tells me stuff like 880 commute sucks the most - and why does it suck? People really don't know how to merge on very well. Also, the MacArthur Maze. Fucking death trap.

From Global Voices - pictures of Tai Hu, a freshwater lake in China that is pretty polluted. We went there on our tour, and I guess we got to see the non-polluted side. It sucks, because it's a gorgeous site.

NotCouture - new fashion blog. Drool over pretty things.

I totally WISH I could see this: Damon Albarn of Gorillaz fame collaborates with Chen Shi-Zheng to create a new version of the Monkey King. Animation, too!
toastykitten: (Default)
W00T! Forgive my geeking out for a second. Mark installed Ubuntu for me and I am totally blissing out. I had stopped using my own laptop entirely for a while, because I couldn't stand waiting for half an hour for my XP to boot up, and then waiting another half hour for whatever program I wanted to start up. It was annoying. I also didn't want to spend any money on buying a new non-Windows computer - I was getting pretty disillusioned with Apple's products - granted, I only have one iPod Mini, but that experience was enough.

There were a couple glitches, though. There was this one major bug that had actually been filed last year that Mark had to write a script around. And there's some minor bugs, like printing issues. But Mark says he'll fix that up for me later. And he also warns that I'll have a hard time playing media, but there are workarounds. In the meantime I don't have anything to print, and playing around with this has been a lot of fun. I'm also excited about playing around with GIMP, which is sort of like a Linux Photoshop clone. Everything loads up so quickly - I'm amazed.

South Park Mac vs. PC:



Other things:

I'm really looking forward to Judd Apatow's new comedy Knocked Up.

I'm terrified by this link that I saw at Warren Ellis' blog: Research from a British university suggests a common preservative found in drinks such as Fanta and Pepsi Max has the ability to switch off vital parts of DNA.
Page generated Jun. 28th, 2025 02:00 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios