2013

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From the September 5, 1897 New York Times:

Rutland, Vt.–Mrs. Horace I. Brookes, daughter of Col. Le Grand B. Cannon of New York City, has had her right leg amputated at her father’s Summer home, Overlake, in Burlington.

Mrs. Brookes has been a great sufferer for some time, and it was believed that the time for removing her leg in order to save her life had gone by.

On her arrival at Overlake, however, she said that she felt equal to the operation, which was finally performed by Dr. L.M. Bingham, assisted by Dr. Henry Jackson.

The patient rallied quickly, suffering no shock whatever, since which time she has continued to improve and is now past all danger, and is on the road to the rapid recovery of her accustomed good health.”

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Copyright law isn’t normally the first consideration when we think back on Martin Luther King’s soaring “I Have a Dream” speech fifty years on. Those inspiring words still ring from the hilltops and mountains of every state, as famous any uttered by Abraham Lincoln in his first inaugural oration or the Gettysburg Address. King’s words belong to us all–well, with some restrictions. From Alex Pasternack at Vice:

“Martin Luther King Jr.‘s ‘I Have a Dream’ speech is considered one of the most recognizable collection of words in American history. It’s the rhetorical equivalent of a national treasure or a national park. The National Park Service inscribed it on the Lincoln Memorial and the Library of Congress put it into its National Recording Registry. So we might hold it to be self evident that it can be spread freely.

Not exactly. Any unauthorized usage of the speech and a number of other speeches by King – including in PBS documentaries – is a violation of American law. You’d be hard pressed to find a good complete video version on the web, and it’s not even to be found in the new digital archive of the King Center’s website. If you want to watch the whole thing, legally, you’ll need to get the $20 DVD.

That’s because the King estate, and, as of 2009, the British music publishing conglomerateEMI Publishing, owns the copyright of the speech and its recorded performance. While the copyright restriction isn’t news, EMI’s unusual role in policing the use of King’s words – the first instance of the company taking on a non-music based intellectual property catalog – hasn’t been widely reported.”

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Writer Harlan Ellison, a brilliant wiseass who has never taken any shit from anybody, even that insecure thug Frank Sinatra, recently made a public appearance in Los Feliz, getting a haircut and addressing an audience. Patton Oswalt and David Ulin were there. (Thanks L.A. Review of Books.)

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Daniel Kahneman has taught us that people who feel observed behave more morally. Further proof: An excerpt from “Surveillance Changes Behavior,” Steve Lohr’s New York Times article about the shift in employee behavior when bars and restaurants watch them via monitoring software:

“Most of the restaurant industry pays its servers low wages and they depend on tips. Employee turnover is high. In that environment, a certain amount of theft has long been regarded as a normal part of the business.

Unethical behavior runs the gamut. There is even a how-to book on the subject, published in 2004, How To Burn Down the House: The Infamous Waiter and Bartender’s Scam Bible by Two Bourbon Street Waiters. A simple example is a bartender’s not charging for a round of drinks, and urging the customers to ‘take care of me’ — with a large tip. Other tactics are more elaborate.

But monitoring software is now available to track all transactions and detect suspicious patterns. In the new study, the tracking software was NCR’s Restaurant Guard product, and NCR provided the data. The software is intentionally set so that a restaurant manager gets only an electronic theft alert in cases that seem to clearly be misconduct. Otherwise, a manager might be mired in time-consuming detective work instead of running the restaurant.

The savings from the theft alerts themselves were modest, $108 a week per restaurant. However, after installing the monitoring software, the revenue per restaurant increased by an average of $2,982 a week, or about 7 percent.

The impact, the researchers say, came not from firing workers engaged in theft, but mostly from their changed behavior. Knowing they were being monitored, the servers not only pulled back on any unethical practices, but also channeled their efforts into, say, prompting customers to have that dessert or a second beer, raising revenue for the restaurant and tips for themselves.”

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Frank Lloyd Wright, on Omnibus with Alistair Cooke in the 1950sbeing spectacularly wrong on several topics: skyscrapers in cities, population concentration and the future of urbanism.

Whenever I’m On The Subway. . .

. . . I have to fight the urge to tickle people. Is there something wrong with me?

Below is the opening of Isaac Asimov’s classic NYT report about the 1964 New York World’s Fair. He was certainly right that we would continue to withdraw, but the palace of retreat was the inside of our heads and not an underground home. The excerpt:

The New York World’s Fair of 1964 is dedicated to “Peace Through Understanding.” Its glimpses of the world of tomorrow rule out thermonuclear warfare. And why not? If a thermonuclear war takes place, the future will not be worth discussing. So let the missiles slumber eternally on their pads and let us observe what may come in the nonatomized world of the future.

What is to come, through the fair’s eyes at least, is wonderful. The direction in which man is traveling is viewed with buoyant hope, nowhere more so than at the General Electric pavilion. There the audience whirls through four scenes, each populated by cheerful, lifelike dummies that move and talk with a facility that, inside of a minute and a half, convinces you they are alive.

The scenes, set in or about 1900, 1920, 1940 and 1960, show the advances of electrical appliances and the changes they are bringing to living. I enjoyed it hugely and only regretted that they had not carried the scenes into the future. What will life be like, say, in 2014 A.D., 50 years from now? What will the World’s Fair of 2014 be like?

I don’t know, but I can guess.

One thought that occurs to me is that men will continue to withdraw from nature in order to create an environment that will suit them better. By 2014, electroluminescent panels will be in common use. Ceilings and walls will glow softly, and in a variety of colors that will change at the touch of a push button.

Windows need be no more than an archaic touch, and even when present will be polarized to block out the harsh sunlight. The degree of opacity of the glass may even be made to alter automatically in accordance with the intensity of the light falling upon it.

There is an underground house at the fair which is a sign of the future. if its windows are not polarized, they can nevertheless alter the ‘scenery’ by changes in lighting. Suburban houses underground, with easily controlled temperature, free from the vicissitudes of weather, with air cleaned and light controlled, should be fairly common.•

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Satan’s catheter.

 

Toilets are for losers.

Toilets are for losers.

You got that right, brother.

They sure are, brother.

“On the opposite side of the hall lived the Widow Gray, a dealer in oil cloth.”

Even if you can get $25 for your husband–and few women can–you still aren’t legally allowed to sell him. That was the lesson one young wife learned, according to an article in the August 10, 1897 Brooklyn Daily Eagle:

“Mrs. Hannah Robinson, 25 years old, sold her husband, John, for $25 to Mrs. Jennie Gray, a widow, last Thursday, and now she regrets it. The Robinson were married in Scotland on April 30, 1888, and they have a son 2 years old, who is being cared for by the grandfather in Jersey City.

For the past year the Robinsons have lived on the ground floor rear of 621 West Forty-fifth Street, New York. On the opposite side of the hall lived the Widow Gray, who is a dealer in oil cloth. Both Robinson and his wife peddle oil cloth from house to house that they bought from the Widow Gray. Recently Mrs. Robinson noticed that her husband and Mrs. Gray were infatuated with each other and on Thursday Mrs. Robinson made a proposition to sell her husband to the widow for $25.

The widow agreed to this and a bill of sale was made out by a notary. Mrs. Robinson finally repented of her act and told her neighbor about it. They all informed her that selling a husband was against the law and advised her to apply for the arrest of the couple in court. Yesterday she obtained a summons for Magistrate Wentworth at Yorkville Court, returning this morning, but the couple paid no attention to it.

She also called upon lawyer Benjamin F. Greenbthal of 805 Amsterdam Avenue and laid the case before him. He at once procured papers for absolute divorce against Robinson, which he managed to serve on him yesterday afternoon.”

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There is occasionally the shock of the new within a culture, but usually the future arrives wearing the clothes of the past. On that topic: In the epic 1965 Life magazine science special I blogged about yesterday, there is a section titled, “Will Man Direct His Own Evolution?” which is a fun but seriously overwrought essay by Albert Rosenfeld about the nature of identity in a time when humans are made by design, made of temporary parts. Like a lot of things written in the ’60s about science and society, it’s informed by an undercurrent of anxiety about changes beginning to affect the nuclear family. An excerpt:

“Even you and I–in 1965, already here and beyond the reach of potential modification–could live to face curious and unfamiliar problems in identity as a result of man’s increasing ability to control his own mortality after birth. As organ transplants and artificial body parts become even more available it is not totally absurd to envision any one of us walking around one day with, say, a plastic cornea, a few metal bones and Dacron arteries, with donated glands, kidney and liver from some other person, from an animal, from an organ bank, or even an assembly line, with an artificial heart, and computerized electronic devices to substitute for muscular, neural or metabolic functions that may have gone wrong. It has been suggested–though it will almost certainly not happen in our lifetime–that brains, too, might be replaceable, either by a brain transplanted from someone else, by a new one grown in tissue culture, or an electronic or mechanical one of some sort. ‘What,’ asks Dr. Lederberg, ‘is the moral, legal or psychiatric identity of an artificial chimera?’

Dr. Seymour Kety, an outstanding psychiatric authority now with the National Institute of Health, points out that fairly radical personality changes already have been wrought by existing techniques like brainwashing, electroshock therapy and prefrontal lobotomy, without raising serious questions of identity. But would it be the same if alien parts and substances were substituted for the person’s own, resulting in a new biochemistry and a new personality with new tastes, new talents, new political views–perhaps even a different memory of different experiences? Might such a man’s wife decide she no longer recognized him as her husband and that he was, in fact, not? Or might he decide that his old home, job and family situation were not to his liking and feel free to chuck the whole setup that have been quite congenial to the old person?

Not that acute problems of identity need await the day when wholesale replacement of vital organs is a reality. Very small changes in the brain could result in astounding metamorphoses. Scientists who specialize in the electrical probing of the human brain have, in the past few years, been exploring a small segment of the brain’s limbic system called the amygdala–and discovering that it is the seat of many of our basic passions and drives, including the drives that lead to uncontrollable sexual extremes such as satyriasis and nymphomania. 

Suppose, at a time that may be surprisingly near at hand, the police were to trap Mr. X, a vicious rapist whose crimes had terrorized the women of a neighborhood for months. Instead of packing him off to jail, they send him in for brain surgery. The surgeon delicately readjusts the distorted amygdala, and the patient turns into a gentle soul with a sweet, loving disposition. He is clearly a stranger to the man who was wheeled into the operating room. Is he the same man, really? Is he responsible for the crimes that he–or that other person–committed? Can he be punished? Should he go free?

As time goes on, it may be necessary to declare, without the occurrence of death, that Mr. X has ceased to exist and that Mr. Y has begun to be. This would be a metaphorical kind of death and rebirth, but quite real psychologically–and thus, perhaps, legally.”

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Google is (perhaps) planning on designing its own car to demonstrate its autonomous automobile software to other manufacturers. From Kevin Fitchard at Gigaom:

“Google is weighing building its own line of self-driving cars independent of the automakers, according to a new report by Amir Efrati on JessicaLessin.com. Efrati doesn’t name his sources, but he’s a veteran Google reporter formerly of the Wall Street Journal so I have little reason to doubt them. But it does raise an interesting question: Can a tech company — even one with the resources and innovation drive of Google — build an automobile from scratch?

First the details of the report: Efrati’s sources said Google is making no headway with the entrenched automakers over partnerships to build self-driving vehicles. So it’s opted to go around them, talking to auto-components designers Continental and Magna International about having them build cars to Google’s design. (German paper Frankfurter Allgemeine also reported Continental has struck a deal with both Google and IBM.)

Efrati’s report added that Google might use these cars as part of a ‘robo-taxi’ service that prowls cities picking up passengers on demand.”

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“Cars with no steering wheels,” 1950s:

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As the Vietnam War ended, CBS News correspondent Bruce Dunning filed a stunning report about the South Vietnamese desperate to flee the country as North Vietnam regained control. Watch his classic report here. Dunning just passed away. From his obituary at the CBS News site:

“He is best remembered for his award-winning and dramatic report on March 29, 1975 aboard a 727 World Airways jet attempting to rescue refugees from the airport in Da Nang, South Vietnam. The five-and-a-half-minute report — long even then for a television evening news segment — was broadcast on the CBS Evening News Saturday edition anchored by Dan Rather, who introduced Dunning’s segment with the words ‘Da Nang has become a Dunkirk.’

As Dunning narrated on the scene, the camera showed the throngs running for the plane as it landed and then he described how it filled up almost instantly with young Vietnamese military deserters, some armed and ‘menacing.’ ‘The men President Thieu said would defend Da Nang,’ said Dunning. The camera then captured the stunning images of the airline’s president, Ed Daly, punching young men to the tarmac who were trying to get aboard the overloaded airliner’s rear stairs and then, at 6,000-feet up, pulling in one last straggler, still holding on through take-off and ascent after seven others had fallen. The aircraft’s mission was to gather as many women and children as it could hold, but as Dunning reported, the crew counted 268 persons, among them just five women and ‘two or three young children.

His report, dubbed ‘Back from Da Nang,’ won the Overseas Press Club’s ‘Best TV News Spot from Abroad’ award and was recently named to the Columbia University Journalism School’s 100 Great Stories list. Dunning also shared in a collective OPC award for CBS News radio coverage of the last days of the war.”

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From an Economist article that’s skeptical about the implementation a pilotless planes, which I strongly believe will ultimately become standard:

“Overall, cockpit automation has been a boon—at least for airlines. It saves fuel, helps with maintenance, reduces the number of crew needed on the flight deck and cuts their training time. To some extent, it also makes it easier for pilots to qualify on other aircraft types, though there are significant differences in control philosophies between Airbus and Boeing.

That aside, the over-arching problem with cockpit automation stems from the way it has been implemented—with flight crew relegated from their traditional role of physically flying the aircraft to becoming essentially systems supervisors. Unquestionably, this has taken its toll on their ‘stick-and-rudder’ skills. Instead of flying their planes, flight crew now spend most of their time in the air programming and monitoring various pieces of equipment (a typical airliner has around 90 automated systems on board), inputting data and checking that everything is working correctly.

Many of today’s younger pilots (especially in the rapidly expanding markets of Asia and the Middle East) have had little opportunity to hone their airmanship in air forces, general aviation or local flying clubs, allowing them to amass long hours of hand-flying various aircraft in all sorts of weather conditions and emergencies.” (Thanks Browser.)

David Harris is a police reporter in his hometown of Flint, Michigan, which is American’s most dangerous city according to FBI statistics. He just did an Ask Me Anything on Reddit. A few exchanges follow.

____________________________

Question:

All of my family is from Flint and lives all over the city and the township. With current unemployment rates being reported at just above 10% in Flint and about 7.1% in Flint township, unemployment seems to be effecting Flint like other cities in the US. What do you think is the main cause for the violence other than unemployment and the economy.

David Harris:

Not necessarily in order: Lack of education, loss of hope, declining police force, lost city services, breakdown of the family structure, lack of respect for life.

____________________________

Question:

I lived in Flint and went to Kettering. I used to live on Sunset over by Mott Park and the golf course.

David Harris:

One thing that always intrigued me about Flint was that it was this crime-ridden town with all kinds of violence and theft, yet you could go weeks at a time without realizing you were in that sort of a town. It just seemed like an interesting dichotomy to me. We would go to school and walk past normal middle class neighborhoods and then, one day, we’d randomly see a guy hanging by his neck from the bridge over the Flint River.

____________________________

Question:

Knowing what you know and seeing what you see, do you ever fall into that illusion that Flint is a “normal” town from time to time? Or is that now impossible for you?

David Harris: 

I’ve always felt that Flint was far from normal. I think covering it up close has made me realize that even more. 

____________________________

Question:

What do you think about the stark contrast between the cities in Michigan? Ann Arbor, where I live, is constantly in the top five cities to live in (lists based on various criteria.), yet you have the most dangerous city in the country not too far away.

David Harris:

This is just my opinion, but cities like Ann Arbor, and Grand Rapids for that matter, were not as tied to the auto industry as Flint and Detroit. They have much more diverse economies with different businesses, including universities. Flint has never been able to put back in what GM left.

____________________________

Question:

Is there anything nice about the city? Parks, attractions, etc.?

David Harris:

There are many good things about the city. The downtown has seen a revival the last 10 years or so with new bars, restaurants and residential apartments. The local colleges, the University of Michigan-Flint, Kettering (formerly General Motors Institute), Baker and Mott Community College, have grown. 

Plus we have two really awesome events, The Crim Road Race and Back to the Bricks car show, that bring hundreds of thousands of people in the city.

____________________________

Question:

What are your thoughts on Michael Moore? Do you think anything he has produced has impacted Flint in any way? 

David Harris: 

Michael is certainly a controversial figure in the city. Flint would certainly be less known nationally if it wasn’t for his movies.

____________________________

Question:

What steps, if any do you think the city could take to reduce crime to a more manageable level?

David Harris:

I’ve said this before: If I had millions, I would start a program similar to the Kalamzaoo Promise that pays for college education for kids in that city and if I had superpowers, I would entrust respect of others into everyone.•

••••••••••

The “Pets or Meat” segment from Roger and Me:

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Mika Brzezinski and a sexist toaster debating the merits of twerking.

 

It's worse than genocide.

It’s worse than genocide.

You're old and pretty.

You’re old and pretty.

He's also ageist.

He’s also ageist.

Tech-driven spying didn’t start in America recently–or even with Watergate–but the tools have grown exponentially cheaper and better over time. It has reached critical mass and won’t be completely tamed no matter the law. That doesn’t mean it’s right, just that it’s reality. The opening of “Big Brother Is Listening,” Ben H. Bagdikian’s 1964 Saturday Evening Post article:

“One evening last year, after most of the offices of the State Department Building were closed, two hard-working men let themselves into Room 3333 and began dismantling the telephone. They were Clarence J. Schneider, a technician, and Elmer Dewey Hill, a State Department electronics expert. Working under orders of John F. Reilly, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Security, the men changed some wires, reassembled the telephone and left. For two days the innocent-looking telephone in the office of Otto F. Otepka, Deputy Director of the Office of Security, doubled as a microphone, relaying everything which was said in the office, whether or not the phone was on the cradle. In a laboratory some distance away, diligent eavesdroppers recorded 12 separate conversations.

On July 9, four months later, Hill was put under oath by the Senate Internal Security subcommittee and asked, ‘Do you know of any single instance in which the [State] Department has ever listened in on the telephone of an employee?’ Hill answered, ‘I cannot recall such an instance.’

On August 6, Reilly was put under oath and asked, ‘Have you ever engaged in or ordered the bugging or tapping or otherwise compromising telephones or private conversations in the office of an employee of the State Department?’ Reilly’s answer was, ‘No, sir.’

The parties in this particular charade were engaged in some political in-fighting. Otepka, a security officer brought into the State Department in 1953, had risen to one of the top security evaluation jobs in Washington. But now he himself was under suspicion. His superiors believed that he was feeding classified information to a hostile Senate committee in order to embarrass his boss, Reilly. So Reilly had Otepka’s phone fixed to catch him in the act. He also had Otepka’s wastebaskets intercepted on the way to the incinerator and combed for incriminating material. Reilly says he lost interest in the phone tap after finding in the wastebasket a piece of carbon paper with the impression of 15 questions which Otepka had allegedly typed out for Senate investigators to ask Reilly.

At the time, these two men – Otepka and Reilly – were responsible for passing judgment on the loyalty, security and reliability of American diplomats. Hill and Reilly later ‘amplified’ their denials of eavesdropping by giving the facts and promptly resigned from the State Department. Otepka, charged with passing privileged documents without authority, carries on in a sort of limbo, marking time on the payroll while awaiting a hearing on his dismissal.

The story of Otto Otepka is part of the brave new world of white-collar eavesdropping in the United States Government. The eavesdropping may consist merely of a silent secretary’s taking down your words while you speak to her boss, or it may be a hidden microphone recording everything you say in what you think is a confidential interview. Some governmental eavesdropping is directed against espionage and crime, of course, but a great deal more is done for bureaucratic convenience and gamesmanship, either to spring a trap on a colleague or to avoid one. 

These days, consequently, if you telephone a Washington official of more than middling importance – or it he calls you – the odds are disturbingly high that a third person is listening in. They are almost as high that every important word you utter is being taken down in shorthand. And while lower, the odds are still significant that your entire conversation is being taped. 

In fact, Americans are so busy snooping on one another that it has almost been forgotten that Big Brother may not be an American at all. A European diplomat recently told of having discovered a man tinkering with the wall clock in his Foreign Office chamber at home; he immediately called his security men for fear the man was planting a microphone ‘for our Russian friends.’ A short time later, an American who works for the American military in Washington made an unexpected Saturday visit to his office and found a stranger in the process of dismantling his phone. The stranger had tools draped around his waist and said he was a telephone man checking phones. The American said later that he assumed a microphone was being planted. Asked who he thought responsible, he said, ‘Oh, I suppose one of our spooks’ – meaning a rival American military agency. Did it occur to him, as it had to the European, that the man could have been ‘one of our Russian friends’? The American thought about that for a moment. ‘Well, of course, it could have been,’ he admitted, ‘but I’m told our spooks do it so often, I just naturally assumed it was one of ours.”‘

Electronic snooping is not confined to Government, of course. Thanks to modern science, privacy is becoming more and more rare all over the world. Even a child can send away for a $15 device that picks up sounds in a room across the street. For $17.95 you can buy a machine that secretly tapes telephone conversations without touching a wire. And $150 buys a TV camera the size of a book that can spy on a room secretly while you watch on a distant monitor. Using these and other modern methods, American business has turned increasingly to espionage in recent years.”

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"You can begin with a FREE 30 minute phone consultation."

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From the April 19, 1876 Brooklyn Daily Eagle:

“This morning Officer Maloney of the Washington Street Precinct found a human finger lying in the gutter in front of No. 310 Hicks Street. The finger appears to have been chopped off with some sharp instrument, and does not look as though it had been amputated.”

From “The Match Maker” Dan Van Natta Jr’s ESPN Magazine article which suggests that the famed 1973 “Battle of the Sexes” tennis match may have been mobbed up, with Bobby Riggs throwing his match with Billie Jean King to pay off a gambling debt:

“WHEN HAL SHAW heard the voices at the Palma Ceia Golf and Country Club in Tampa, Fla., on a winter night some 40 years ago, he turned off the bench light over his work table and locked the bag room door. He feared burglars. Who else would be approaching the pro shop long after midnight? Then Shaw, who was there late rushing to repair members’ golf clubs for the next day’s tournament, heard the pro shop’s front door unlock and swing open.

Peering through a diamond-shaped window, Shaw, then a 39-year-old assistant golf pro, watched four sharply dressed men stroll into the pro shop. He says he instantly recognized three of them: Frank Ragano, a Palma Ceia member and mob attorney whose wife took golf lessons from Shaw, and two others he knew from newspaper photographs — Santo Trafficante Jr., the Florida mob boss whom Ragano represented, and Carlos Marcello, the head of the New Orleans mob. Trafficante and Marcello, now deceased, were among the most infamous mafia leaders in America; Marcello would later confide to an FBI informant that he had ordered the assassination of John F. Kennedy. A fourth man, whom Shaw says he didn’t recognize, joined them.

Shaw’s workroom was about 20 feet from the men, who sat at a circular table. Through the window to the darkened bag room door, he could see them, but they couldn’t see him. Shaw says he was “petrified” as he tried to remain completely still, worrying that the men would find him lurking there. Then Shaw heard something he’d keep secret for the next 40 years: Bobby Riggs owed the gangsters more than $100,000 from lost sports bets, and he had a plan to pay it back.

Shaw, now 79, told the story of what he saw and heard that Tampa night to a friend late last year for the first time. This spring, he told it to Outside the Lines.

The men, Shaw says, used an array of nicknames for Riggs — “Riggsy,” “BB,” “Bobby Bolita.” Ragano told the men that “Riggsy” was prepared to “set up two matches … against the two best women players in the world,” Shaw says. “He mentioned Margaret Court — and it’s easy for me to remember that because one of my aunt’s names was Margaret so that, you know, wasn’t hard to remember — and the second lady was Billie Jean King.”

Ragano explained that Riggs “had the first match already in the works … and the second match he knew would follow because of Billie Jean King’s popularity and everything that it would be kind of a slam dunk to get her to play him bragging about beating Margaret Court,” Shaw says Ragano told the men. Shaw also says he heard Ragano mention an unidentified mob man in Chicago who would help engineer the proposed fix.”

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An excerpt from “A Test Tube Colony,” a segment of Life magazine’s 1965 four-part science series, “Control of Life,” which imagined a future in which cold-storage embryos were used to create a space-age Noah’s Ark:

“In this symbolic photograph, Dr. [E.S.E.] Hafez [of Washington State University] holds a set of dummy vials which, he says, could contain ‘the barnyard of the future–complete with the farmer.’ Fertilized egg cells could be shipped anywhere in cold storage in containers like these, each vial color-coded to identify the species it contains. Hafez believes his techniques are are particularly suitable to the space age, as a means of colonizing planets. ‘When you consider how much it costs in fuel to life every pound in the launch pad,’ he says, ‘why send full grown men and women aboard spaceships? Instead, why not ship tiny embryos, in the care of a competent biologist who could grow them into people, cows, pigs, chickens, horses–anything we wanted–after they get there? After all, we miniaturize other spacecraft components. Why not the passengers?”

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George Will, who is not a confirmed yahoo like many in his party, nonetheless sucks at math. Right before he predicted Romney would beat Obama in a landslide despite the polls saying the opposite, he also set Hillary Clinton’s chances of becoming President at a very low number. Clinton may or may not be elected to the highest office in the land, but his statement already seems foolish. From a September 24, 2012 interview on Alec Baldwin’s Here’s the Thing:

Alec Baldwin:

What do you think her political future is?

George Will:

Zero. There’s a whole generation of coming candidates. Andrew Cuomo in New York. Governor O’Malley in Maryland. Countless people. Paul Ryan. All kinds of good people out there.”

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Dr. Jonas Salk’s fourth cousin inventing a cure for polo.

 

Die, you dreaded disease!

Has anyone seen Buttercup?

Has anyone seen Chestnut?

 

10 search-engine keyphrases bringing traffic to Afflictor this week:

  1. the stepford wives 1975
  2. humans racing horses
  3. errol morris film about rick rosner
  4. documentary about spider sabich the skier
  5. hans christian andersen’s obituary
  6. billy carter’s billy beer
  7. stories about ivan boesky insider trader
  8. are genetically modified crops healthy?
  9. dick cavett writing about stephen colbert
  10. louis daguerre photography pioneer
Afflictor: Thinking Chelsea Manning should be considered for a pardon.

Afflictor: Thinking Chelsea Manning should be considered for a Presidential pardon.

Your move, Barbara Obama.

Your move, Barbara Obama.

  • Ron Paul, who proved straw polls mean nothing, did an Ask Me Anything.
  • Jeff Bezos likely knows what he’ll be doing with the Washington Post.
  • A brief note from 1921 about a nose job.

Mike Jay’s Aeon piece, “The Reality Show,” about the nature of mental illness in a world guided by technology and covered in cameras, a place in which we’re always, to some extent, onstage, is probably the best essay I’ve read so far this year. The opening:

Clinical psychiatry papers rarely make much of a splash in the wider media, but it seems appropriate that a paper entitled “The Truman Show Delusion: Psychosis in the Global Village,” published in the May 2012 issue of Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, should have caused a global sensation. Its authors, the brothers Joel and Ian Gold, presented a striking series of cases in which individuals had become convinced that they were secretly being filmed for a reality TV show.

In one case, the subject travelled to New York, demanding to see the “director” of the film of his life, and wishing to check whether the World Trade Centre had been destroyed in reality or merely in the movie that was being assembled for his benefit. In another, a journalist who had been hospitalised during a manic episode became convinced that the medical scenario was fake and that he would be awarded a prize for covering the story once the truth was revealed. Another subject was actually working on a reality TV series but came to believe that his fellow crew members were secretly filming him, and was constantly expecting the This-Is-Your-Life moment when the cameras would flip and reveal that he was the true star of the show.

Few commentators were able to resist the idea that these cases — all diagnosed with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, and treated with antipsychotic medication — were in some sense the tip of the iceberg, exposing a pathology in our culture as a whole. They were taken as extreme examples of a wider modern malaise: an obsession with celebrity turning us all into narcissistic stars of our own lives, or a media-saturated culture warping our sense of reality and blurring the line between fact and fiction. They seemed to capture the zeitgeist perfectly: cautionary tales for an age in which our experience of reality is manicured and customised in subtle and insidious ways, and everything from our junk mail to our online searches discreetly encourages us in the assumption that we are the centre of the universe.

But part of the reason that the Truman Show delusion seems so uncannily in tune with the times is that Hollywood blockbusters now regularly present narratives that, until recently, were confined to psychiatrists’ case notes and the clinical literature on paranoid psychosis. Popular culture hums with stories about technology that secretly observes and controls our thoughts, or in which reality is simulated with virtual constructs or implanted memories, and where the truth can be glimpsed only in distorted dream sequences or chance moments when the mask slips. A couple of decades ago, such beliefs would mark out fictional characters as crazy, more often than not homicidal maniacs. Today, they are more likely to identify a protagonist who, like Jim Carrey’s Truman Burbank, genuinely has stumbled onto a carefully orchestrated secret of which those around him are blandly unaware. These stories obviously resonate with our technology-saturated modernity. What’s less clear is why they so readily adopt a perspective that was, until recently, a hallmark of radical estrangement from reality. Does this suggest that media technologies are making us all paranoid? Or that paranoid delusions suddenly make more sense than they used to?•

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