50 years ago today

Today marks the 50th anniversary of the founding of Microsoft. Far from the behemoth that it is today, it started out as just two guys creating a partnership in Alberquerque, New Mexico.

I wonder how many stories we could tell about the humble origins of mighty corporations. For example, The Walt Disney Company started out as a ragtag little independent animation house in Kansas City, as a partnership between Ub Iwerks and some other young fellow.

My favorite TV show

I am watching my favorite TV show yet again. This is my fifth time through the entire series, and it gets better each time.

I am in the middle of Season 1, Episode 3, and one of my favorite lines was just spoken:

“First vampires, now witches. No wonder you can still afford a house in Sunnydale.”

How can you not love such a show?

VR and movies

An NYU film student asked me today what I thought about making movies for VR. I’ve seen a fair number of VR movies, and I’ve made some myself, so I guess I’m qualified to answer.

My opinion, after seeing (and taking part in) the past decade or so of experimentation in this area, is that it’s not a very good idea. Not that I have anything against VR.

In fact, I think VR is awesome, and there is a lot of amazing content out there. But I’ve reached the conclusion that the frame, the proscenium, whatever you want to call it, is essential for good storytelling.

A good filmmaker will make powerful use of that frame, to focus the attention of the audience, to create dramatic tension, and to define the world that contains the action. If you lose that rectangle, you are losing one of the most powerful and effective tools of visual storytelling.

So while I love VR, I don’t think it’s the future of movies. And that’s what I told the student.

SWI

In many parts of the United States, it has long been understood to be dangerous to be DWB. As you may know, that is shorthand for “driving while black”.

In a somewhat parallel development, it seems that it is now dangerous in the USA to be SWI. Or, in other words, “studying while Islamic”.

John Astin

For some reason, last night I started thinking about John Astin. I wasn’t sure why.

He had many wonderful roles, but my favorite by far was Gomez Addams in the original Addams Family TV show. His unique sense of intelligent playfulness in that show was a great inspiration for many people, including myself.

But then I started to wonder — why did I start thinking about John Astin just now? And by the way, what has become of him? Is he still alive?

Then today I happened to see on Wikipedia that today is his birthday. The great man was born on March 30, 1930 — and yes, he is still with us.

Now I am wondering — did I somehow already know about his birthday? Or was my thinking about him just now simply one of those magical coincidences?

In any case, I am delighted that one of my childhood heroes is still around to inspire us. And I hope that many people will join me in wishing him a very happy 95th birthday!

Future poll

It’s not the meanness and focus on petty retribution that worries me most about what is going on now in Washington D.C. — although those things are indeed worrisome. It’s the astonishing level of amateurish incompetence.

It’s like somebody says they will fix your car, and then they proceed to smash it to bits with a sledgehammer. But in this case it’s a government that is being smashed to bits.

And that means the stakes are very high. When idiots start dismantling the mechanisms required for a nation to function, people suffer and people die.

After these goons are voted out (assuming that your vote will still count by then), I wonder how people will remember all this.

I’m imagining a future poll in which citizens are asked how they voted in 2024. I suspect that the number who are willing admit that they voted for this clown will be very close to zero.

Signal achievements

Let’s all hang out on Signal
I hear it’s quite the hoot
Where you meet the finest people
And journalists to boot

You can plan attacks on Yemen
And share that with your bros
And with everybody else, in fact
‘Cause that’s the way it goes

When a very stable genius
Picked you to head armed forces
‘Cause he likes your pretty TV hair
So critics, hold your horses


For at least one person’s happy
I can tell as sure as shootin’
See, what’s happened to our country is
The greatest gift to Putin

DEI, part 4

This is the point in the discussion where honesty requires taking the gloves off. Our president is not merely a racist and white supremacist. He is a proud and determined racist and white supremacist.

He made a point of firing general Charles Q. Brown precisely because of Brown’s superior capability and merit. Brown is a black man who, by any objective measure, is vastly more competent and intelligent and accomplished than either the president or his motley crew of yes-men.

And that means that Brown must be disappeared. In addition, there needs to be an insidious smear campaign suggesting, against all evidence, that this highly decorated fighter pilot and accomplished military officer was hired only because of his skin color.

To put it plainly, the president — who hangs out with people like Nick Fuentes and places his government in the hands of people who give Nazi salutes — is clearly terrified of people who are not white and who are more intelligent and capable than he is. Because the entire premise of racism is to fight against merit.

Once you start to acknowledge that some of the most talented, capable and hard working people are not white, you can no longer maintain the illusion of white superiority. So the fact that a child born into a family that is not white might actually be the smartest kid in the room can never be spoken of.

DEI, when properly implemented, is the most powerful way for a society to economically reward itself. The society that is able to promote those who are most objectively talented and capable, regardless of their background, is a society that will enjoy the greatest prosperity for all.

So if you’re a racist, you need to mislabel DEI as a hand-out to the undeserving. And just to be safe, you also need to implement destructive economic policies that make it difficult or impossible for people to succeed economically on the basis of their own merit.

Which, you will note, is exactly what our current administration is doing. Because actual merit based success is that very last thing a racist will ever tolerate.