Tonight’s movie: Rollerball (1975)

The remake got terrible reviews, so we decided to watch the 1975 original version of Rollerball. Note that with the exception of the general play of the game and the idealistic main character, there is not commonality to these two Rollerballs. James Caan plays Jonathon E, the most famous athlete in a future world where nations, war, and poverty have faded away and six corporations rule everyone’s life. Jonathon has become bigger than the sport and this the corporations cannot allow.

But Jonathon has not become the champion he is without also learning a few things, so we have a sweet scene where he confronts the system, in the form of his ex-wife Ella (the gorgeous Maude Adams, who was taken away from him years before when an Executive desired her), and he tells her people have made the wrong choice: comfort over freedom. She replies that comfort is freedom but from the look on Jonathon’s face we know that we are to to understand that Ella is a captive of the system unable to break free from the blinders imposed by it.

Director Norman Jewison has never been afraid to use blood to make a point and he certainly does so here. Players are as likely, and in the end more likely, to end up as splatter as to walk away. His previous film was Jesus Christ Superstar and he definitely gives Caan’s Jonathon somewhat of a messianic cast, not unlike the apotheosis Keanu Reeves undergoes in the Matrix. Jewison made a Hollywood movie, but one that was obviously influenced by the visual and auditory techniques developed by European directors in the ’60s.

The film has strong performances from John Houseman as the Executive who confronts Jonathon, John Beck as the teammate who is sacrificed to teach Jonathon one final lesson, Burt Kwouk (Cato in the old Pink Panther movies) in a small role as a doctor, and Moses Gunn as Jonathon’s mentor.

If you want to see a good Rollerball, save your $9 from the new release and rent the original.

More Enrons: Ron Perelman plays financial games

Barron’s reports on Ron Perelman’s latest shenanigans and that he’s likely to get his way in selling a stake in Panavision to M&F Worldwide, another publicly-traded company he controls. Somehow, this other company was willing to pay $17.50 per share when Panavision stock was trading at $4. The other shareholders of M&F weren’t so happy and drove the stock down 18% Friday after the news cme out. Perelman is an operator whose exploits go back to the junk bond salad days in the 1980s. As the article mentions, one wonders how much longer such financial engineering will be going on in light of Enron, Global Crossing, and (speculating) Calpine.

NBC’s Opening Night Coverage Is More Limp Than Olympic

I’ll just go with the article headline for this one, hard to put it better. I kept thinking, “Why is Costas/Couric talking now? I would like to listen to the show.” Over and over. How stupid. I was surprised just how touching the Native American and Sting/Yo-Yo Ma performances were and there were some lovely visual touches with the stadium audience, but NBC really blew their coverage. Just hope the event commentators aren’t such blabbermouths.

Today’s email joke: Viagra

Over the past few years, more money has been spent on breast implants and Viagra, than on Alzheimer’s. In a few years we will have millions of people running around with huge breasts and stiff dicks, but won’t remember what the hell to do with em…

Football coaching merrygoround: Bucs imploding

Well, one day after the Bucs werethisclose to naming Marvin Lewis as head coach, they dumped him. And now GM Rich McKay’s future with the Bucs is unclear, since he wanted Lewis and the Glazer boys told him no. On one hand this is not too surprising a development since ex-coach Tony Dungy was shown the door because he couldn’t move the offense and Lewis has no track record on that side of the ball. On the other hand, their search has been so high profile, what with being jilted by Bill Parcells early on and being left with their noses pressed up against the Raiders window with a birght shiny Gruden doll just inside, that you’d think the team would go with the obvious choice and calm the storm. Lewis now appears resigned to another defensive coordinator stint, getting paid near head coach dollars, with Spurrier and the Redskins. Marv Levy, 76 years old and obviously bored out of his skull with five years of retirement, is offering his services on a one year deal (leaving the Bucs in position to grab Gruden when his contract expires), but the initial reaction from Tampa Bay is not too bright. Tick tock, tick tock boys!

One Runtime to Bind Them All

Microsoft is positioning certain aspects of the .NET initiative as much more flexible and unconstrained than Java/J2EE, the main competition. However, in One Runtime to Bind Them All, Osvaldo Pinali Doederlein and the Java Lobby post a detailed rejoinder to what looks more and more like a marketing-only feature, the ability of the Common Language Runtime to support many different programming languages. But, and this is a big but, only of the language is modified to in some very restrictive ways. C++ and Eiffel, for example, support multiple inheritance but the CLR does not so the .NET versions of these languages, Managed C++ and Eiffel#, don’t either. So much for out of the box compatibility with existing code bases. Anyway, read the article and be enlightened.

eWeek: What is going on?

I know that economics in the computer publishing industry have been difficult lately, causing several well-known magazines to shut down and pushing rivals into mergers. But I expect that still-going concerns like eWeek/ZD Media to at least use their resources wisely. Instead we get pieces like DB Test Pioneer Makes History written by the West Coast director of eWeek Labs. I wrote him the following via email:

“”Just curious as to the point of this article. Most people in the industry are already aware of the license limitation, although I suppose the point of origin is an interesting tidbit. Seems like recently there have been an increasing number of such short pieces in eWeek. Given the lawsuit filed by the NY Attorney General against Network Associates on a similar license clause, I would have expected the article to at least speculate on similar applicability in this situation. How, after all, is Oracle’s clause different from NA’s?”

ZD did post an article on the New York case as well. Though a similar question could reasonably be posed to the New York AG: why sue NA now and only them and not other companies with speech-stiffling license clauses as well? For example, Microsoft has similar restrctions on SQL Server and the .NET Framework components.

Back to my original point: what useful value is served by Dyck’s article?

Update: Mr. Dyck replies “I had talked to David DeWitt and thought the origin of the license clause was an interesting historical event — that was the only point. I wrote that story a few weeks ago, before the NY Attorney General’s lawsuit, so couldn’t reference that event, but I’m very supportive of it, and hope the state is successful. All these clauses are on similar legal ground, and so this case will be precedent setting.”

Last night’s TV: World Trade Center: Anatomy of the Collapse

The Learning Channel had an interesting show last night, World Trade Center: Anatomy of the Collapse. The producers interviewed a number of individuals, some of whom were involved with building the WTC 30 years ago, structual engineers who analyzed the collaps, and Paul Johnson, architectural critic for the NY Times. The show was generally very well done and brought out a lot of important information. Sadly the structural engineer who was responsible for the WTC towers’ innovative design feels guilty over his choice but I don’t think he can be blamed. Did you know these two buildings had more office space than Cincinatti?

Newsflash: Illness caused by sin

I’m sorry, but did we just start the year 2002 or 1002? A German archbishop and high-ranking Vatican official says people get sick because they sin. And I thought illness was due to those nasty microbes and viruses and other tiny little things that get into our bodies. Which leads us to the question of what sin has the Pope committed recently that caused his current maladies. Simply using the 10 commandments as a rule, I better be careful because I’m due for a whopper any day now. Of course, so are essentially every single other person with whom I am personally acquainted. I could be wrong but I thought that even the Church of Rome had given up on the idea that God directly intervenese in all our lives on a daily basis quite some time ago.

Time Machine Top 10

Brent has an amusing idea and lists his Top 10 time/places he would go if he had such a machine. I believe one other assumption is a universal translater. This is a cool meme, so I’m adding mine:

  1. Moses at the Burning Bush, ~1250 b.c. This would cover all my religious curiousity.

  2. Bruce Springsteen at the Stone Pony in 1974.

  3. Haight-Ashbury, July 1967.

  4. Princeton’s Institute of Advanced Studies, 1925, to hang out with Einstein and the gang.

  5. Shakespeare’s England, have to agree with Brent on this one.

  6. Southeast Asia, 30,000 b.c., to ride along with the migration fom the mainland to Indonesia and Australia.

  7. Delhi, 326 b.c., riding along with Alexander the Great as he rode through India.

  8. Europe with Machiavelli, 1500-1512, on his missions abroad.

  9. Playboy Mansion, 1974, ’nuff said.

  10. Chess Studios, Chicago, May-June 1955, recording Chuck Berry’s first album

A real retirement vacation

Targeting the initial voyage for 2018, astronaut Buzz Aldrin and a team of engineering researchers at Purdue university are planning a space hotel (50 guests, all the creature comforts) that will cycle back and forth to Mars (the trip is six to eight months each way). In 16 years I’ll be 56, give them a few voyages to work the kinks out, so I expect to be on this ship sometime in the mid 2020s. Cool!

Football coaching merrygoround: Bucs make mad offer to Raiders

The funhouse show continues in Tampa Bay as the owner’s sons and their general manager, who was almost booted a couple of weeks ago when Parcells was on the way in, can’t seem to agree on a new coach. Latest rumor is they have made an offer to the Raiders for right to talk to Jon Gruden. A big offer. But old crank Al Davis has to take it by today or it’s off the table. Then we have Ravens DC Marvin Lewis, the most discriminated gainst man in football (seriously), who is the first choice of GM Rich McKay; Lewis has no choice but to sit and twist in the wind publicly if he wants to break through the barrier. For sure he better not say anything impolitic. You have to figure this exemplifies the hidden reasons why the Bucs have never made it into the Super Bowl despite having had a quality team the last few years.

Super Bowl Ads: Judge for yourself

Sunday I put up my brief opinions of all the Super Bowl commercials. Sunday night PBS had a half hour discussion of five of the ads, which I watched and thought was tres condescending, but thanks to iFilm, you can see all the ads yourself. Don’t miss the Budweiser New York, Levi’s Crazy Legs and Cadillac Zeppelin spots. Bad Company and Rudy Guiliani Tribute are cool too.

U2 at Halftime: Not tasteless!

Jason over at Q gave his opinion that the curtains scrolling the names of the lost during the show was tasteless. I disagree, in fact that’s what I was watching when I blogged the comment “I don’t usually cry at football games.” Some commentators are saying that Americans are already forgetting the emotion and sadness of what happened to us on 9/11 but I disagree. I think that as with any tragedy the mind tries to soften the pain, and Jason being a doctor probably knows this, but this tribute was simple and elegant. I wonder what people like Jason think an appropriate tribute in this forum would have been.

Yesterday’s recipe: Oyster garlic beef and broccoli

Can’t live another day without knowing how to make this delicious dish yourself? I served it over fresh long grain white rice. Here goes, portions for two:

Ingredients

  • 1 lb beef, cut into thin strips suitable for stir fry

  • 3 broccoli crowns, cut into florets

  • 2 shallots, thinly sliced

  • 8 oz white mushrooms, thinly sliced

  • 4 oz soy sauce

  • 4 tablespoons oyster sauce

  • 4 cloves garlic, chopped up fine

  • 4 tablespoons olive oil

  • 1 tablespoon oregano

    Instructions

  • Mix garlic and two tablespoons oyster sauce all over beef in a bowl and let stand 30 minutes to marinate

  • Add four tablespoons of olive oil to a hot wok, flame to medium

  • Add marinated beef after oil is warmed, stir until both sides are browned

  • Add shallots, keep stirring

  • Add broccoli, keep stirring

  • Add soy sauce (stir a little more)

  • Add salt and fressh ground pepper to taste, stir stir stir

  • Add rest of oyster sauce (don’t make me say it)

  • Stir for another two minutes

  • Add mushrooms, stir well

  • Add oregano

  • Stir more

  • Lower flame, let simmer for five minutes, stir occasionally

  • SERVE!!!
  • Bill plays with code

    Is the world a safer place? Nope. But no matter. Beau over at DentedReality in Australia posted PHP code to call the Blogger API and I decided to play around with it a little. After looking his fine effort over, I decided it needed the billsaysthis touch and converted it into a fine OOP PHP class. Don’t know what that means? Don’t worry. Just check out the result on my Springsteen page; I use it to pull in all the Springsteen weblog entries. And you can use it too if you use PH and Blogger. Thanks Beau!

    Friends might be back

    Neither network NBC nor producer Warner Brothers want this eighth season to be the last one of Friends, although a few months ago that’s how the situation was shaping up. Reports this week though say that negotiations are going on to bring the cast back and that the talks wouldn’t be going on if the six friends weren’t open to the notion. This year each of them gets $750,000 per episode for 22 episodes. The rumor says to come back will cost $1-1.1 million per episode per friend. That’s at least $22 million per friend for the season, $132 million for the lot. But this year has seen the show come back with strong storylines, especially Joey/Rachel and Rachel’s pregnancy, so next year dealing with the baby in this triangle could be ripe. I’m open to the idea.