... you can write about whatever you want.
April 22, 2023
"I invented Edna because I hated her.... I poured out my hatred of the standards of the little people of their generation."
Dame Edna emerged when the young Mr. Humphries, under the sway of Dadaism, was performing with a repertory company based at the University of Melbourne.... On long bus tours, he entertained his colleagues with the character of Mrs. Norm Everage — born Edna May Beazley in Wagga Wagga, Australia, sometime in the 1930s — an ordinary housewife who had found sudden acclaim after winning a nationwide competition, the Lovely Mother Quest.
Unthinkable as it seems, Edna was dowdy then, given to mousy brown hair and pillbox hats. But she was already in full command of the arsenal of bourgeois bigotries that would be a hallmark of her later self...
I loved Dame Edna. (Click my "Dame Edna" tag.) But not everyone appreciated this sort of humor:
"Swimming is required to graduate with full honors from the elite Manhattan public school. Some Muslim girls worried..."
After the outcry, Education Department officials said this week that students who need accommodations would soon be able to receive full honors through classes on other life skills....
When did you first become sensitized to the mocking of women?
I wonder, this morning, as I scan the comments on yesterday's post, "Whatever you think of [Dylan] Mulvaney’s transition, or her rather cloying girlishness... [s]he traffics not in anger or cruelty, but in whimsy and joy."*
Here's what I'm seeing (boldface added):
Sebastian: "Exuberant mockery of women, subversion of common sense, and in-your-face-take-that-deplorables-middle-fingerism....
Michelle Dulak Thomson: "[A]ll I can say is that he doesn't traffic in 'whimsy and joy.' He is a sick individual who mercilessly mocks women. Which is evidently OK these days....""This show unites blue-chip buttocks by the likes of Francis Bacon, Andy Warhol, John Currin and Cecily Brown; dorsal drawings and pastels by Degas, Klimt and Schiele..."
Paul Cadmus, whose retrograde male nudes are enjoying an unmerited revival in attention, appears here with yet more anemic drawings of standing and reclining musclemen, none more consequential than the gents on a Calvin Klein underwear box. (For what it’s worth, the gay male artists in this show all come out looking second-rate, with none of the perverse intelligence of Degas, Schiele and the other straight bros. Did Michelangelo die for this?)....
"What speech, she said, comes close to being a 'true threat' but is so 'supervaluable' that we need to be worried about it?"
At the end of nearly two hours of debate, the justices generally appeared skeptical of Colorado’s contention that courts should use an objective test, that looks at whether a reasonable person would regard the statement as a threat of violence....
Chief Justice John Roberts... cited one of the statements for which Counterman was convicted, in which he told Whalen that “staying in cyberlife is going to kill you. Come out for coffee.”....
Justice Amy Coney Barrett... asked “[Who] is the reasonable person?” She outlined a hypothetical involving a college classroom in which a professor, for “purely educational” reasons, “puts up a picture of a burning cross and reads aloud some threats of lynching that were made at the time.” “Maybe it’s the case,” Barrett suggested, “that nowadays people would be more sensitive to that and … a reasonable Black college student sitting in that classroom would interpret that as threats … that might materialize into actual physical harm.”
April 21, 2023
"As far as I’m concerned, I sat next to [Clarence Thomas] on the bench for 28 years. I like him. He’s a friend of mine."
Breyer... pushed back on the criticism that the Supreme Court does nothing on ethics... He said the difficulty with a code of ethics in the Supreme Court is that the justices can’t be replaced if they disqualify themselves like lower court judges.
"Whatever you think of [Dylan] Mulvaney’s transition, or her rather cloying girlishness... [s]he traffics not in anger or cruelty, but in whimsy and joy."
"I should have the right to introduce my daughter to the concepts of adultery and coveting one's spouse."
RFK Jr.'s presidential announcement speech is so good, but it made me wonder why is it so hard to be this good? Why isn't this just basic competence?
Possible answer to my question: It's really not that good. It's just that old clips of Bobby and John flip an emotional switch in my head and distort my perception.Please help me share this video announcing my run for President of the United States. #Kennedy24 pic.twitter.com/OLvOXZlRHC
— Robert F. Kennedy Jr (@RobertKennedyJr) April 20, 2023
Making it a crime not to censor.
Here's Jonathan Turley in "The Tower for Twitter? UK Minister Calls for Jailing Social Media Bosses Who Do Not Censor Speech":
[A]fter Musk decided to buy Twitter, Hillary Clinton called upon European countries to force social media companies to censor Americans. The European Union quickly responded by threatening Musk and other executives. Now, Technology and Science Secretary Michelle Donelan has announced plans to jail social media executives if they fail to censor so-called “harmful” content on their websites. The government, of course, will determine what is deemed too harmful for citizens to see or hear....
The bill focuses on "'all forms of expression which spread, incite, promote or justify hatred' based on various progressive characteristics, including transgenderism."
Elon Musk is "personally" paying for blue check subscriptions for LeBron James, William Shatner, and Stephen King.
Now you know who are the truly elite of this world.
The sportsman, the actor, and the writer.
Not politicians and journalists. And certainly not every sportsperson, showbiz character, and creative scribbler.
Just these very grand characters — James, Shatner, and King.
Musk tweets: "I’m paying for a few personally."April 20, 2023
"This is a story about French liberty and bureaucracy. It is about different visions of the countryside and nature."
"But [Hadley] Freeman is eager to dispel the idea that anorexia is simply about the desire to be thin. Instead, she says, the goal..."
"... people are romanticising their lives by editing them like Wes Anderson and it’s honestly so creative and wholesome."
Girl on the train đźš‚ pic.twitter.com/SR25LuSzir
— ZoĂ« Crowther (@zoenora6) April 18, 2023
"SpaceX’s Starship rocket exploded above the Gulf of Mexico on Thursday, minutes after lifting off from a launchpad in South Texas."
AND: Supposedly, any success after liftoff was just "icing on the cake":Congrats @SpaceX team on an exciting test launch of Starship!
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 20, 2023
Learned a lot for next test launch in a few months. pic.twitter.com/gswdFut1dK
"One way of thinking about work is that it gives workers two rewards: the familiar one, pay; and a less familiar one, meaning and community."
Said Daniel Markovits, lawprof and author of "The Meritocracy Trap," quoted in "Hustle culture: Is this the end of rise-and-grind?" (BBC).
"Even when our clothes wore thin, ripped or got stained, my mother would convert them into quilts, cutting tiny geometric shapes..."
Writes Charles M. Blow in "I Want to Be the Old Man With the Orange Socks" (NYT).
"I love to see a beautifully stereotyped man and woman—a beautiful prince-and-princess waltz—but not because we’re forced to..."
Said Gabriella Papadakis, a female ice dancer who wants to be able to skate with another woman, quoted in "The Once Unthinkable Revolution Coming to Figure Skating Is the sport ready? Some of its biggest stars think so" (Slate).
My first reaction to this was that women will lose out, because males will physically dominate. But that might not be true, considering the supply and demand problem in ice dancing:
April 19, 2023
A 70-year-old woman said to a waitress that Volodymyr Zelensky is a "handsome young man" and that "everyone used to laugh at his jokes."
The shocking criminalization of freedom of speech in America.
Here's one of the leaders of one of the groups who is now indicted, Omali Yeshitela of @_InPDUM, speaking at a "Peace in Ukraine" rally last month.
— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) April 19, 2023
Criminalizing speech is becoming increasingly common by claiming the speech serves Russia's interests:https://t.co/i9kmkLYykr
Can I actually expect ChatGPT to write "a blog post in the style of Ann Althouse"?
Please go to that link to see how I caught ChatGPT making up a study — supposedly by Pew — called "AI in the News: How the Media Cover Artificial Intelligence, and How They Should." I caught it in the act, cornered it, extracted a confession, and badgered it until it — seemingly — hung up on me.
That's all quite interesting, but I want to get back to the subject of whether it was silly/arrogant of me to think it might be able to write "a blog post in the style of Ann Althouse." Its response to my prompt was nothing like my style. When I told it that was "way too long and boring," it tried again and, again, failed to sound anything like me.
A commenter said:
Those are pretty terrible, but you have to teach it your style by feeding it a selection of your blog posts.
Last night at the Stoughton Opera House.
A pre-show picture:
"Many of Fox’s arguments had been crippled in pretrial hearings, and the company was facing the likelihood that some of its top stars, including Tucker Carlson and Sean Hannity..."
Writes Clare Malone in "The Stunning End of Dominion’s Case Against Fox News/The voting-machine company has agreed to a seven-hundred-million-dollar settlement in its defamation suit against Rupert Murdoch’s cable news network" (The New Yorker).
April 18, 2023
"Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis released a parody of the old Bud Light 'Real Men of Genius' commercials taking aim at transgender female athletes..."
"If the progressive left wants Sam’s school to keep his gender secret from me, that’s fine. But then..."
"The couple first prepared a fire altar before putting their heads under a guillotine-like mechanism held by a rope."
The couple had been worshiping the god Shiva — one of the main deities of Hinduism — at an improvised temple they had set up on their property every day for the past year.
"Organ transplantation is mired in stagnant science and antiquated, imprecise medicine that fails patients and organ donors."
Writes Amy Silverstein, in "My Transplanted Heart and I Will Die Soon" (NYT).
"More than fifty years before it was isolated as a drug, Samuel Taylor Coleridge dreamed up cocaine."
"When psychologists asked what sort of habits and choices were markers of creativity, they came up with things like 'divergent thinking' and 'tolerance for ambiguity.'"
You might wonder how Menard argues his way to the notion that "now we're stuck with" individualism and nonconformity. I can't quote the whole article, but it has to do with capitalism capitalizing on the concept of creativity. As Franklin puts it: "The concept of creativity never actually existed outside of capitalism."
April 17, 2023
"Inspired by all the batshit-crazy but completely real questions that I and other female comedians have endured over the years..."
Says Jena Friedman in "Jena Friedman Gives Male Comedians the Female Media Treatment/'Do you think men can be sexy AND funny?'" (LitHub)(via Metafilter).
"I didn't talk to myself out loud, but I had internal conversations and got on very well with myself."
Said Beatriz Flamini, quoted in "Spanish athlete Beatriz Flamini emerges from cave after 500 days — and she did not want to come out" (ABC News).
She spent her time exercising, painting, drawing, knitting, and reading, and she "focused on retaining 'coherence,' eating well and relishing the silence." She said the experience was "excellent, unbeatable."
"I think it’s a political hit job... this ProPublica group in particular, funded by leftists, has an agenda to destabilize the [Supreme] Court."
"Like many journalists, I have a bad habit of underestimating Donald Trump. I didn’t think he had a chance of winning in 2016."
"Al Franken sounds high."
"The suspect is not a deranged lunatic or career criminal left free to roam the hills of the city by a district attorney who left office nine months ago..."
Writes Jay Caspian Kang in "Bob Lee’s Murder and San Francisco’s So-Called Crime Epidemic/The killing of a tech executive reveals the cycle of outrage that puts enormous pressure on progressive district attorneys" (The New Yorker).
"I have tried to be the most uncontroversial person this past year, and somehow it has made me controversial still."
Said Dylan Mulvaney, quoted in WaPo article with the confusing title "Bud Light chief says he ‘never intended’ boycott over trans star Dylan Mulvaney" (WaPo)(who would think the Bud Light chief intended a boycott?).
"Awe has typically been a difficult emotion to evoke, said lead author Alex Smalley, but feelings of awe can improve mood..."
April 16, 2023
At the Magnolia Café...
"Even after it was evident that this painful, potentially disfiguring or even fatal infection was spreading through gay men’s sexual networks..."
From "How Gay Men Saved Us From Mpox" by Ina Park and Dan Savage (NYT).
"Some Democrats worry crackdown on TikTok could hurt party/As the White House toughens its stand toward the wildly popular app, party strategists urge caution."
Democrats have so successfully cultivated TikTok clout and the soapbox it provides for young voters — in contrast to Republicans’ far less enthusiastic embrace — that party operatives are now drawing up detailed plans to dramatically expand its use in the 2024 campaign. But that strategy is colliding head-on with the Biden administration’s push to crack down on TikTok....
"AITA for participating in my neighborhood’s easter egg hunt that was meant for children?"
A hilarious "Am I the Asshole" posting gets cross-posted at "Am I the Devil" (a subreddit for cross-posting when it's obvious the answer is yes).
Why am I not interested in fooling around with A.I.?
People are using A.I to …
1. Plan gardens....
2. Plan workouts....
Are people using A.I. to plan articles about A.I.?
3. Plan meals....
So tedious!
6. Organize a messy computer desktop....
Can I use A.I. to organize my messy thoughts about A.I.? Write me a blog post in the style of Ann Althouse about how news media are resorting to listicles in an effort to shore up the flagging interest in A.I.