'Our ability to take any pleasure, or even interest, in shows like this—in which participants are depicted as energetic but essentially aimless, oblivious of their own deficits, and delusional about their attractiveness and their importance in the world—hinges not on our ability to identify with them but on our ability to distinguish ourselves from them. Unless the show manages to make us feel as though we were anthropologists secretly observing a new tribe through a break in the trees, it hasn’t done its job. MTV has succeeded on that score; it can give itself a pat on the back for enabling viewers to feel superior to at least eight other people.'
Jan 16, 2010
New Yorker Review of 'Jersey Shore'
Never seen the show - but still enjoyed reading this article.
Jan 10, 2010
Who's Sleeping Now?
Friendman's column on China's leadership on green technology.
Money Quote: "Here’s e-mail from Bill Gross, who runs eSolar, a promising California solar-thermal start-up: On Saturday, in Beijing, said Gross, he announced “the biggest solar-thermal deal ever. It’s a 2 gigawatt, $5 billion deal to build plants in China using our California-based technology. China is being even more aggressive than the U.S. We applied for a [U.S. Department of Energy] loan for a 92 megawatt project in New Mexico, and in less time than it took them to do stage 1 of the application review, China signs, approves, and is ready to begin construction this year on a 20 times bigger project!” "
Jan 5, 2010
Chiddy Bang Remixes
Re-posting something from Jordan's hip-hop blog, the Needle and the Groove.
I have a feeling that the following songs are going to get a lot of play on my ipod in the next few weeks...
Download Chiddy Bang's remix here.
I have a feeling that the following songs are going to get a lot of play on my ipod in the next few weeks...
Download Chiddy Bang's remix here.
As Population Shifts in Harlem, Blacks Lose Their Majority
Due to an influx of whites and non-black minorities, Blacks are no longer the majority population in Harlem, the NY neighborhood synonymous for black urban life. Is it another example of gentrification or integration of once racially exclusive neighborhoods?
"Some experts say the decline in the black population may be overstated because poorer people are typically undercounted by the census, and Harlem has a disproportionate number of poor people. Others warn that proposed development and higher property values may force poor people out and say that when the city was the neighborhood’s leading landlord it should have increased ownership opportunities for Harlem residents .
“Gentrification — the buying up and rehabilitation of land and buildings, whether by families or developers, occupied or abandoned —means a rising rent tide for all, leading inevitably to displacement next door, down the block, or two streets away,” said Neil Smith, director of the Center for Place, Culture and Politics at the City University of New York Graduate Center."
"Other analysts point to the outflow of some blacks and the influx of others as positive evidence that barriers to integration have fallen in other neighborhoods and that Harlem has become a more attractive place to live.
Check out the NYT article here.
“It’s a mistake to see this only as a story of racial change,” said Scott M. Stringer, the Manhattan borough president. “What’s interesting is that many African-Americans are living in Harlem by choice, not necessity.”"

Americans’ Role Seen in Uganda Anti-Gay Push
Three Evangelical American pastors led a conference last March in Uganda last month about "curing" homosexuality. Unknowingly, their lectures helped stoke the fire brewing against homosexuals in Uganda -- specifically the recent law passed in the Uganda parliament to make a homosexuality an act worthy of the death penalty.
"Human rights advocates in Uganda say the visit by the three Americans helped set in motion what could be a very dangerous cycle. Gay Ugandans already describe a world of beatings, blackmail, death threats like “Die Sodomite!” scrawled on their homes, constant harassment and even so-called correctional rape.Read the NYT article here.
“Now we really have to go undercover,” said Stosh Mugisha, a gay rights activist who said she was pinned down in a guava orchard and raped by a farmhand who wanted to cure her of her attraction to girls. She said that she was impregnated and infected with H.I.V., but that her grandmother’s reaction was simply, “ ‘You are too stubborn.’ ” "
Jan 4, 2010
Gauging the Dedication of Teacher Corps Grads
A damning study to the effectiveness of Teach For America:
"In areas like voting, charitable giving and civic engagement, graduates of the program lag behind those who were accepted but declined and those who dropped out before completing their two years, according to Doug McAdam, a sociologist at Stanford University, who conducted the study with a colleague, Cynthia Brandt.Read the NYT article here.
The reasons for the lower rates of civic involvement, Professor McAdam said, include not only exhaustion and burnout, but also disillusionment with Teach for America’s approach to the issue of educational inequity, among other factors."
Jan 2, 2010
Google and India test the limits of Liberty
Google runs into the cultural implications of a free market of information in India.
"The rules of political speech on the Internet are usually pretty simple. In America, almost anything goes. In places like China, the censors call the shots. But in India -- a boisterous democracy that's riven by religious and ethnic tension -- the game is far trickier, as Google is discovering."
"As Google broadens its reach, it must increasingly tweak the way it operates to suit new cultures. While authoritarian countries pose well-known challenges, Google is learning that even democracies such as India can be fraught with legal and cultural complications. Its experience here could serve as a precedent for other Web companies.
The nation of 1.2 billion is the world's largest democracy and in principle affords free speech to its citizens. But the country has a volatile mix of religious, ethnic and caste politics and a history of mob violence. So, the government has the authority to curtail speech rights in certain cases. India's Constitution encapsulates that gray zone: Free speech is subject to "reasonable restrictions" for such purposes as maintaining "public order, decency or morality."
Check out the Wall Street Journal article here
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