POPULATION: 1 Old Rancher and The Manson Family
“Thirty years ago, a census taker had a brush with weirdness on the Spahn Ranch.”
Daily Archives: 3 Aug 00
Eight blacklisted Hollywood writers finally get screen credits for their work.
Parental Discretion: “A simple question no one seems to want to ask: If Dick
Cheney loves and is proud of his openly lesbian
daughter, why is he supporting a man who wants her to
live under the threat of criminal sanction? It’s no secret
that Governor George W. Bush has publicly supported
Texas’s still-extant gays-only sodomy law, which makes
private, consensual sex between gay adults a crime.
Does Cheney agree with his running mate’s position?” The New Republic
I couldn’t believe how pitiful it was. Bo Derek honored to be reading scripted comments at the Republican convention, and tongue tripping over some token Spanish. And, no less pitiful, this National Review columnist complaining that the celebrity decks are stacked so far to the left that poor old Bo just won’t be enough to sway the tide:
Sadly, this isn’t going to be enough, and even more sadly, this matters. In
our tranquil, ill-educated times, showbiz sets not only the cultural, but the
political agenda. The drip, drip, drip of a predominantly liberal message
in the movies, TV, and the other entertainment media is bound to wear
through to the ballot box. We saw this in Britain, where a hostile cultural
scene proved to be the harbinger of the crushing Conservative defeat in
the 1997 election. Writing in the London Sunday Times the following
year, the newspaper’s then-resident leftist, the writer Robert Harris, noted
— with, probably, some satisfaction — that he couldn’t think of one
single “important” British writer or, for that matter, a film director, theater
director, composer (“apart from Lord Lloyd Webber”), actor, or painter
who was a Conservative.As Mr. Harris went on to point out, “the entertainment and fashion
industries are now two of the biggest economic sectors in the world.
Never have we lived in a time more conscious of style, and never in
democratic history has it been less stylish to be on the right.”Now, he was writing in a British context, but, like it or not, it’s not too
difficult to see the same process gathering pace over here. It’s not going
to be easy to reverse. On this battlefield, the Right are simply too few.
Eugene Kennedy’s long investigative report Mike Barnicle and American Twilight
on the Boston Globe‘s poorly justified firing of the outspoken commentator two years ago. Barnicle was by many accounts the most popular Globe columnist, offending many by tweaking their political correctness left and right. Kennedy feels it was one particular Globe editor’s self-serving hypocrisy that brought Barnicle down over a non-issue without an adequate opportunity to defend himself. It deserves looking at again since the Globe just did something seemingly similar to Jeff Jacoby, their only columnist with conservative credentials.
“That’s American twilight: Being found half guilty in the half light that’s too dim to
illuminate the whole truth, the truth that is complex while accusations are simple and
live forever on the Internet. Dusk is a great equalizer, right and wrong, honor and
dishonor, they look the same after sundown.” Jim Romenesko’s Media News
Tensions Cool in Philadelphia Streets. No ‘days of rage’ for Philadelphia 2000, says the mainstream press (it would be interesting to hear the perspective of the demonstrators). The police commissioner said: “They were folks who came here hell-bent on causing disruption. The Philadelphia Police Department is in control of the situation. Make no mistake about that.” The nascent new movement — energetic and focused, spontaneous and decentralized — touted in the aftermath of the WTO and IMF showings does not appear much in evidence. In fact, some protesters were quoted explaining that the protests had petered out because “their leaders” had been jailed early on. Strategists of the movement have offered that they will be targeting the Democratic convention in more force, because the Democrats are more prone to listen and be influenced by their agenda. Meanwhile, the one moment of any controversy on the convention floor almost seemed more than what fizzled on outside.
Judge Sets FBI Email Scanning Disclosure. The judge has granted the Electronic Privacy Information Center’s request for expedited processing of its Freedom of Information Act inquiry into the inner workings of ‘Carnivore’, after Janet Reno had decreed that the details would only be revealed to a “group of experts.” EPIC and ACLU say the tremendous potential for violation of constitutional protections against unreasonable search and seizure mitigates for full and open disclosure of how Carnivore works. Once installed at an ISP site by court order, it “sniffs” or scans all traffic through the site, although the FBI assures us that only data related to criminal activity is filtered in and reviewed. How good are the FBI’s programmers at writing ‘perfect’ search filters? how invested?
Giant Trap Set for Monster in Lake. Scientists hope to net Nessie’s Norwegian cousin Selma.
Web Site Asks for Donated DNA Samples, appeals to donors’ altruism to help it build a DNA database it hopes will allow correlation between medical conditions and genetic loci. ‘The privately held company will use the data to “offer several products and services” to
other firms and research facilities, another section of the Web site explains. Among other
revenue-generating projects, the firm intends to “provide aggregate health and genetic
information to outside research facilities,” and to “sell and/or lease clinically useful genetic
associations to public and private research and product development institutions.” ‘