The Paper Chase

Our sister just asked us to bring home a bunch of our non-recycled New Yorkers for Rosh Hashona, which reminds us not only of the eighty or so we haven’t read yet, but of the eighty others we tossed in the bathroom garbage after making sure we’d read what we wanted just to get them the hell off of our plate. We’re feeling a terrible ache about giving those unread ones up, yet the sight of them is so guilt-inducing, that, however hard, we’re going to follow the edict of simply chucking anything you haven’t accomplished in six months* in the interest of sanity. (more…)

Posted by altehaggen in Uncategorized @ Friday, September 30, 2005 12:36 pm | Tags: | Comments (6)

Six Words: Paris Hilton Video, Double-Dare You

The Bush Administration needs to hire this guy to deal with the Katrina footage, STAT. [Via the lovely Lindsayism.]

Posted by altehaggen in WTF @ Thursday, September 29, 2005 9:20 pm | | Comments (0)

Old Hag! Old Hag! We roll the socks. We do not fold.

Wikipedia, the online group encyclopedia, or “wiki”*, will write your articles for you**. We will get excited about this precisely at the moment when those people avidly checking the “recently updated” feed transfer that energy to giving my house a thorough cleaning.

* No offense to Wiki’ers — we’re just taking this opportunity to work off some hostility about the “blogs, or weblogs” thing here.
** Recently, David Plotz — he of The Genius Factory fame — was casting around for his next big idea: ideally, another topic that would have to, like his original Slate series, be written from collective knowledge. “Like a Wiki,” we offered. “Umm, not really,”*** he said. Dude, you know you had no idea what a Wiki was. And you’re probably not going to clean our house, either.
*** We know, we know. He was probably referring more to the “fascinating secret only those who have been silent on’t up to this point can now reveal to the world” aspect. But we are obsessed with Wikis.

Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ 4:33 pm | | Comments (0)

Depressive and Passive Agressive Like Me

Speaking of cultural segregation, California has developed ethnically sensitive psychiatric wards. Now, if they could just develop sensitive psychiatrists, we would be happy. Ba-dump bump.

Posted by altehaggen in WTF @ 3:58 pm | | Comments (0)

Case Closed

When one door closes, another…closes. (NPR looks at Brown v. The Board of Education powerhouse Constance Baker-Motley’s life here.)

Posted by altehaggen in The Man @ 3:19 pm | | Comments (0)

Black, Unlike Me

Timothy Noah has an interesting theory on why he didn’t get the job:

An alternative interpretation of Goldberg’s experience, and mine, is that our prospective bosses didn’t want to hire us, but they also didn’t want to hurt our feelings, so they fibbed. To be told you’ve been turned down for a job because you’re white is to be told it isn’t really your fault. I wouldn’t recommend it as a dodge, because it’s always a bad idea to bring race into sensitive matters when race isn’t really relevant. But maybe the dodge was employed nonetheless.

Yeah — we wouldn’t recommend it for a different reason: Namely, that it’s the worst dodge ever.

Posted by altehaggen in The Man @ 12:31 pm | | Comments (0)

We’re just going to keep repeating “$300 a month” and leave it at that

We spend about 8 seconds a day lamenting that we missed out on the Baltimore housing boom. Apparently, we are brilliant.

THE thought has occurred to just about everybody who owns a home in a hot housing market: maybe it’s time to cash out. The hard part is figuring out how to do so. Only a few families can actually pick up their life in, say, California and move it to Nebraska. The other option - renting - has long been derided as the equivalent of throwing money away. But renting might deserve another look right now.

The problem is, we HAVE picked up our life and moved to the equivalent of Nebraska. Does that count?

Posted by altehaggen in Uncategorized @ 11:31 am | Tags: | Comments (2)

Ghetto Lit

For most African American writers, this section is the only way that they will connect with the browsers, the mostly African American readers who go out of their way to read books by black authors. I have read the arguments against these sections, usually by white readers who were looking for the work of some famous black author like Toni Morrison and were dismayed to be led to The Colored Section. Each time I read such an account, I am painfully aware that the reader has been browsing the bookstore for years before noticing that the “literature” section is all white.

Tayari Jones, author of The Untelling, is discussing The Colored Section of the bookstore over at Maud’s. This was a hot topic in our meta Af-Am lit class while we were in college — a discussion of how the shelf ghetto both serves and stigmatizes an author. (And one that led to many a parry beginning with, “Well, I know my maid Rita…”)
(more…)

Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ 11:20 am | | Comments (14)

Let them eat Caketrain

Not to flog our book, like, mercilessly, but our publisher, Caketrain, has updated its site, and it is even prettier than before. Feel free to head over there and, we don’t know, buy stuff.

Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ Wednesday, September 28, 2005 6:00 pm | | Comments (0)

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