I suppose it’s a little premature to be posting this now, given that we’re in the middle of another storm and all and the plows are coming around again, but damn — when is someone going to do something about the potholes on Commonwealth Ave. around Boston College? No, not on the main road. The carriage lane from the bottom of the hill to around Mt. Alvernia Road is all broken up with craters that make driving on the street similar to what I’d expect it’s like to drive on the moon (forgetting the whole no-gravity thing, obviously). It’s a hazard to both drivers and pedestrians because I’m sure I’m not the only one who swerves to avoid getting a flat tire (and yes, I drive slowly). Maybe the Town of Newton could take care of this before some residents who are less passive aggressive start complaining? And of course, before it gets any worse. After all, it’d be nice if my ability to make change wasn’t just limited to Brookline.
Fill ‘Em Up
7 JanSpinning the Wheel
6 JanMacWorld is this week, and the Onion has news about the biggest product announcement of the day, a laptop with no keyboard!
Behold … the MacBook Wheel.
As Steve Jobs says, people who use keyboards are “standing in the way of human progress.”
http://www.theonion.com/video_embed/?id=14299
Apple Introduces Revolutionary New Laptop With No Keyboard
On the Record
5 Jan
In his new book, Appetite for Self-Destruction: The Spectacular Crash of the Record Industry in the Digital Age, writer Steve Knopper explores the history of the record companies, from the 1960s and the creation of the CD to the present day, trying to explain why the industry enjoyed such boom times in the 1980s and late 1990s, and why it’s in the crapper today. I suppose it wouldn’t take much thought for any casual music fan and amateur industry analyst to provide a guess as to where the business went wrong, but chances are it would not be as thorough or enjoyably presented as Appetite is.
Knopper knows his stuff — he’s been a regular contributor to Wired and Rolling Stone for years — but rather than rehash his old articles and tell the same old stories (like Jeff Gordinier did in his X Saves the World), he’s gone back to the well, conducting more than 200 brand new interviews with executives and others who’ve had a hand in creating or distributing music over the past 40 years. Much of Appetite is anecdotal and episodic, with Knopper zeroing in on one or two characters for pages at a time and telling their stories. There’s a chunk about Steve Jobs and his early struggles with getting the record companies to buy into the iTunes Music Store, of course, and there are sections about Shawn Fanning, Lou Pearlman, and Walter Yetnikoff, among others. Yes, you’ve probably heard some of this before, and Knopper seems to know that, but the way he tells the stories, it’s still entertaining. The Napster chapter is one example where I basically knew the story arc, but I still loved reading about it and learning some new facts about the players involved. It brought me right back to those heady days when I was enjoying the software, before it was taken offline.
It doesn’t really ruin anything to say that Knopper’s message is essentially that the record companies screwed themselves and have only themselves to blame for their current financial woes. They tried to duplicate the success of Thriller too many times, they took advantage of music buyers by raising prices of CDs too high, they sued their own customers at the dawn of the digital age, and they still haven’t adequately capitalized on the potential of the Internet. As charismatic as some of them are, the executives often are presented as slow-to-react traditionalists who resist new technologies, not even realizing the potential of CDs at first, and who stick to the “tried and true” and other old fashioned methods rather than embracing new ways of reaching customers. Everything is included — everything. For example, Knopper includes a history of the longbox and gives appropriate grief to SONY BMG’s rootkit, the software included on some CDs (including one by Neil Diamond) that installed viruses and worms on users’ computers without their knowing. Suffice it to say, music fans won’t find many heroes in this book; instead, they’ll be saying “I told you so” over and over.
Full disclosure: I know Steve Knopper, and have worked with him multiple times on articles for Continental magazine. One of my favorite Knopper articles in Continental was about the Chicago blues scene. Point is, I am not entirely unbiased about this book. But that said, if you’re a music fan, like I am, I hope you’ll give this one a try. It’s a quick but comprehensive read, and it’s full of really interesting information. If Appetite is correct, and the record industry will soon be dead, then Knopper’s book will serve as one hell of an obituary.
Lesson Learned
4 Jan
There’s a saying that says if you learn something new every day, then you live a good life.
(Wait, there isn’t a saying that says that? Well fancy that, I’ve just learned something else.)
Well, for as long as I can remember, I’ve disliked the parking lot at the Landmark Kendall Square movie theater, especially in the winter, when not only do you have to stand in line in the cold to pay nearly $5 for parking, but then you have to roll down your car window on the way out to insert your ticket into a machine so the gate will go up.
It’s annoying.
I know, it’s a pretty silly reason not to like the garage, but the bigger issue, I suppose, is that, given the location, driving to the theater is, like, your only option for getting there.
So I don’t appreciate having to pay so much for parking, especially when there are cheaper options available in the neighborhood. Continue reading
Baby New Year
4 Jan
As problems go, this one is not really a problem. Abby came to visit for a few days this weekend to wish me a Happy New Year, and she had gotten so cute (cuter than the last time I took photos and even cuter than the last time she was in Boston) that my camera just kinda went nuts while she was here. (Saturday we even did an impromptu mini photo shoot when she was cuddled up against me in my apartment.) Now I’ve got a surplus of great photos and I’m not sure which ones are the most frame-worthy. It’s a definite quandary, especially because I’ve already got a few photos of her framed and, you know, when do you replace the older ones of her when she was younger with the newer ones now that she’s eight months old? I just can’t figure out what to do. Help me: Check out the latest collection and tell me which ones are your favorites. It’s a tough choice, eh?
Hopeless Emptiness
4 Jan
It’s the summer of 1955 and all is not what it seems deep in the New York suburbs.
The new film Revolutionary Road tells the story of Frank and Alice Wheeler (played by real-life BFFs Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet), a young couple who move to the titular address, where the neighbors all think they’re special and the perfect couple: They’re attractive, they’ve got two kids, a beautiful home, a blissfully happy marriage, the whole bit.
But the Wheelers are anything but happy, and from early on in the film, we know that beneath the surface, this is a couple that is far from in love. Continue reading