• It looks like Isiah Whitlock Jr., who plays Clay Davis on HBO’s The Wire , has used his trademark “Sheeeeeeet” on other projects. Slate links to two uses in Spike Lee’s The 25th Hour , and wonders whose idea it was to port it The Wire.

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    2/26/2008

The best movie wins the Oscar

I wrote a pan of Atonement in early January, and had this to say about the Oscars:

(57) comments | Mon, 02/25/2008 - 12:00am
  • This is a month old, but I just read about Michael Moore’s excellent idea for promoting nonfiction and foreign films:

    My new year’s resolution is to sit down with the heads of exhibition chains and have them devote one screen in their multiplexes to nonfiction and foreign films…This could be on the 15th screen of a multiplex that would otherwise have the sixth showing of the new “Harry Potter” movie. Some of these films make $200 or $300 per screen.

    Would this have already happened if it made economic sense? Or is Moore hitting upon an innovative idea?

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    2/24/2008

Conventions and protests

Part 1: The Convention I got up early yesterday to make sure I got to the Reno Events Center in time for the registration period of the Democratic Washoe County convention. Once I picked up my “Alternate” badge, I sat in the bleachers for more than six hours while listening to speeches by Harry Reid and other local Nevada politicians. In the meantime, the credentials committee spent the day trying to figure out how to seat the alternates, which led to some intra-party bickering. Here’s how it was supposed to work: At the end of the caucus, delegates were elected based on the results from the people in each presidential preference group. In Washoe County, this broke down to about 50% for Obama, 40% for Clinton, and 10% for Edwards. When the delegates entered the convention, they cast their votes for their presidential preference (which they could change later in the day), presumably the same one they chose at the caucus, although that wasn’t mandated. As you might expect, not everyone elected to be a delegate shows up at the convention, and hence alternates are seated instead, preferably from the same precinct and presidential preference group as the missing delegates. Because thousands of people showed up at the convention, it took awhile to count the first round of preferences, but it was clear that delegates were missing from all three major groups (Obama, Clinton, and Edwards). However, because it would have taken so long to go through precinct by precinct to select alternates, the representatives of each campaign agreed to make a motion for changing the rules as follows: if Edwards did not have enough alternates to replace their no-shows, they would be replaced by Obama and Clinton alternates, split 50/50. As soon as this proposal was announced to the floor, there was a general outcry form the Obama side of the room. An Obama delegate went to the microphone and stated that they wanted to amend the rule change, but the chairman announced that before an amendment could be made, the floor would have to vote on the original suspension of the rules. After 10 minutes or so of mass confusion, the vote took place and the suspension passed. Immediately afterward, the Obama delegate proposed the following change (I was sitting in the bleachers thinking the same thing): that the Edwards no-shows should be split proportionately between Obama and Clinton, that is 5 to 4, rather than 50/50. There was a debate on the floor about this issue. Someone on the Clinton side, not understanding the change, I think, proclaimed that this was disenfranchising the missing Edwards delegates. The chairman made clear that if you didn’t show up, you couldn’t be disenfranchised. Then another Clinton delegate made a better argument: that we were delaying the already long convention by fighting over 9 state delegates, and was it really worth it? The Obama people shouted yes. Eventually, there was a vote, and the amendment passed. Recounting this, it sounds like a mundane argument over convention rules, and that’s what it was, but resolving a complex debate about fair representation in a room filled with over a thousand delegates was both chaotic and amusing. So now that the process was amended to supposedly speed things up, they started seating alternates. They began with the Edwards alternates, and then seated the Obama and Clinton alternates. I hung back, as I had no strong desire to be a delegate unless my vote was needed. Thirty minutes later, it was clear that the Clinton people didn’t have enough alternates either, and so the remaining Obama alternates (including me) got to cast their preferences. In the end, with Edwards delegates realigning and the Clinton no-shows, Obama went from having 50% of Washoe’s state delegates to 58%. At that point, the convention moved on to the phase where state delegates are elected for the state convention. Only those who were elected state delegates are eligible to go to Denver for the national Democratic convention, and hundreds of people clearly wanted to go. Washoe County is guaranteed one male and two female national delegates, and potentially two more from the congressional district, and so I realized it was highly unlikely I would be elected from the over 500 state delegates Washoe is entitled to. So rather than stick around for the state delegate elections, I left early to attend the Brianna Denison protests. Part II: The protests A few weeks ago, members of the Westboro Baptist church (AKA the “God Hates Fags” group) showed up in Reno to protest the funeral of a fallen soldier. Tens of counter-protesters showed up, mostly from biker gangs, and apparently there was a minor scuffle. When the church announced they would picket the funeral service of Brianna Denison, the young college student who was recently murdered by a serial rapist here in Reno, the story of which has received national coverage, the ACLU of Nevada decided to observe the protest to make sure the local police were protecting the constitutional rights of both sides. I decided to tag along. When we got there, a blizzard had already been raging for over an hour. We walked out in front of the Reno Convention Center, where the service was being held, and soon saw three or four women from Westboro Baptist church standing on the sidewalk on S. Virginia St., one of the busiest roads in Reno. They held signs saying, “God Sent the Killer,” “Pray for More Dead Kids,” and “America is Doomed.” We only saw a few counter-protestors, so we decided to walk down a bit more to see if we could find anything else. By the time we walked back, there were hundreds of counter-protestors, mostly biker gangs and UNR students, surrounding the three or four church members. I started taking some photos, and got threatened by a biker for doing so. It was at that point that I realized that some of the bikers had swastikas on their jackets – it’s not often you find White Supremacists teaming up with college students during a protest, but that’s what was happening. Then the angels showed up: I’m not sure what their message was, but their costumes were creative. At this point, it seemed like the police were doing an admirable job protecting the church members, but we crossed the street to get a better look. I had a hard time taking photos in the nighttime blizzard, but here is what it looked like: Almost everyone in that picture is a counter-protester, but you can see two signs held by the church members below the big American flag. After ten minutes or so of this, with the crowd occasionally cheering whenever a big bus or stretch limo drove by and blocked the church members’ signs, a police SUV drove up and the church members willingly went inside. The cops later told us that they asked to be safely escorted back to their cars. The counter-protest immediately ended, and the memorial service began soon afterwards, attended by nearly 3,000 people. The police did an excellent job keeping the peace, protecting the extremely unpopular protesters and even arresting an angel at one point who evidently became too aggressive. I thought they could’ve done a better job zoning the protest/counter-protest areas, but I guess that’s difficult when you have 3-4 protesters vs. hundreds of counter-protesters. Still, I remember a protest in Boston once where over fifteen cops were lined up like a soccer wall in front of 4-5 neo-Nazis, and I thought that worked pretty well. Regardless, the emotionally heightened moment fizzled, and Brianna Denison got a respectful memorial service.

(4) comments | Sun, 02/24/2008 - 5:00am
  • County conventions matter:

    U.S. Sen. Barack Obama has won 59 percent of the Washoe County convention delegates, despite having won just 51 percent of the Washoe County votes in the caucuses. U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton failed to turn out enough volunteers to fill all of the county delegate spots she won in the caucuses.

    I was one of the alternate delegates for Obama who replaced a Clinton delegate. Tomorrow, I’ll write more about my day today, which included both the county convention and a Westboro Baptist protest and counter-protest. Good times.

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    2/23/2008
  • The Supreme Court has rejected without comment the ACLU’s challenge](/topics/lebanon) to the Bush administration’s domestic spying program. From the AP:

    The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed the suit, saying the plaintiffs could not prove their communications had been monitored.

    The government has refused to turn over information about the closely guarded program that could reveal who has been under surveillance.

    ACLU legal director Steven R. Shapiro has said his group is in a “Catch-22” because the government says the identities of people whose communications have been intercepted is secret. But only people who know they have been wiretapped can sue over the program, Shapiro has said.

    So deliciously Orwellian.

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    2/19/2008
  • This has been in the cards for months now, but it looks like HD DVD is officially dead, as there’s a rumor going around that Toshiba is halting the manufacture of new players. This was a rivalry I hadn’t invested in, except that I never really liked the name “Blu Ray.”

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    2/16/2008
  • Miniature spy guns! If I come at you wearing suspenders and a giant cross, you better be scared. (thx, flea)

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    2/14/2008
  • Now that the Writers Guild of America strike is effectively over, check out this schedule to see when your favorite TV show is coming back. Somehow I’m relieved that 24 has been postponed. (via fimoculous)

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    2/13/2008
  • In France, you can go to jail for your beliefs. I didn’t join the anti-France bandwagon when they refused to back the U.S. in Iraq, but I don’t like their stance on freedom of speech. How about we implement universal health care and they enact a 1st Amendment? (thx, flea)

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    2/8/2008
  • A radio interview with William T. Vollmann about his new book, “Riding to Everywhere,” a non-fictional account of his experience hopping freight trains in the American West. There’s an interesting discussion about the boundaries of authority and society that comes up after several callers criticize him for romanticizing danger. (thx, steve)

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    2/8/2008
  • Richard Abowitz summarizes the ongoing battle in Las Vegas between businesses/local judges and the ACLU/1st amendment. The most recent case involves a woman being thrown in jail for protesting a jewelry business on the sidewalk in front of the business.

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    2/6/2008