Thursday, February 19, 2009
Unhealthy
So I am currently keeping track of the UCLA - Washington basketball game with both ESPN's GameCast and CBS Sportsline's GameCenter. Even watching the score change every thirty seconds starts to make my heart pound. Does this just mean I am a true fan or that I have reached an unhealthy level of identification with my team?
Sunday, February 8, 2009
These are a few of my favorite things
Actually I only want to share two of my favorite things, neither of which are raindrops on roses. The first is the CBS television drama "Numb3rs" (surprisingly pronounced "numbers"). What I love about Numb3rs is that the basic message is this: math wins, crime loses. The main character is Charlie Eppes, who is a math prodigy and professor at a university in Los Angeles that resembles USC. His brother, Don, is an FBI agent, and the challenge of each episode is to see how the writers will concoct a crime that inevitably requires Charlie to write some sophisticated equations on a chalk board that eventually help the Bureau catch the criminals and wrap up the case. Sometimes Charlie's first attempts to help solve the crime fails, but after a late night think tank and a few revisions his second attempt inevitably succeeds. My favorite scenes are of Charlie giving short lectures on statistics, probability, etc. to FBI agents as they walk the mean streets of LA. I'd really like to see a spinoff about Charlie's colleague the history professor who helps save the world from crime and nuclear war--but I guess there is always Indiana Jones and The Hunt for Red October. By the way, what did Prof. Xavier from X-Men receive his degree in?
(Here's Charlie giving a brief lecture on a topic that is both highly complex and crucial to solving the crime at hand.)
Ok, my other favorite activity is listening to sports reports on NPR. NPR does a lot of things really well, but sports reporting isn't one of them. I find it highly entertaining to listen to Robert Siegel or Michele Norris conduct interviews with sports reporters about the latest news in the sporting world. For me, the underlying theme of these rare but fruitful segments is "I understand what Barry Bonds and Michael Phelps say about the American psychological condition and the national economy, but can you remind me again which one of them plays baseball?" I think it's funny to listen to smart but elitist people try to engage with the sports world. So now I'm a critic of the critics--how high is my horse?
(Here's Charlie giving a brief lecture on a topic that is both highly complex and crucial to solving the crime at hand.)Ok, my other favorite activity is listening to sports reports on NPR. NPR does a lot of things really well, but sports reporting isn't one of them. I find it highly entertaining to listen to Robert Siegel or Michele Norris conduct interviews with sports reporters about the latest news in the sporting world. For me, the underlying theme of these rare but fruitful segments is "I understand what Barry Bonds and Michael Phelps say about the American psychological condition and the national economy, but can you remind me again which one of them plays baseball?" I think it's funny to listen to smart but elitist people try to engage with the sports world. So now I'm a critic of the critics--how high is my horse?
Thursday, February 5, 2009
I'm going to Kenya!

Today I booked my flight to Nairobi--woo hoo! The current plan is to spend three months there this summer in order to do research for my dissertation and to just live life in a different place. At this point I don't have any contacts of people living in Kenya, so I'll spend the next few months trying to figure out what the heck I'm going to do while I'm there. I'm guessing it will be the biggest adventure of my life so far--for better or worse. Hopefully it will result in more interesting posts!
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
The Inaugural Post!

No, "!akerue" is not a Japanese word with Spanish punctuation--it's eureka! backwards. It's the cry of my eastward migration away from the promised land of southern California. At this point its not meant to convey that I've lost it, but that may change once the phrase catches on like wild fire. It also fits with my penchant for spelling things backwards, which is not as clever as I once thought. I am reminded of that everytime I have to explain my email address to someone. Just yesterday I failed to receive an important email from a travel agent because instead of "nesnahnoj" she typed "nesnahnjo". Honestly, who the heck is named Ojn? I wrote her name down as McKayla, so justice has been restored.
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