Thursday, January 31, 2008

Forget what I said about John Edwards

Okay ignore everything I said about John Edwards, because he dropped out of the race. I thought he'd at least wait until Super Tuesday and then offer his delegates up to somebody in exchange for a prominent role in the new administration rather than go back to his old job as a TV psychic, but I may have been because the media was salivating over the prospect of a brokered convention. The only real possibility of that happening was if Stephen Colbert had been able to run in South Carolina, since he said he would refuse to release his delegates until the convention, unless they allowed him to speak.

Nobody really knows who Edwards is going to support, but after a handful of states have voted, the race is down to two candidates on either side going into Super Tuesday. Mike Huckabee is still alive, but has not mounted a serious challenge since Iowa, so I assume he's going to run out of money and throw his support behind McCain at some point, along with the critical Chuck Norris endorsement he carries. So your choice, if you choose to caucus in Minnesota or vote in the Illinois Primary this Tuesday, has been slimmed down significantly to Barack vs Hillary, or McCain vs Romney.

Super Tuesday should be interesting as a couple things swung towards Obama, the first being Bill Clinton's continued presence in the headlines of his wife's campaign. Running down Obama created a racial schism in the Democratic party, and now he's jousting with hecklers, and generally looking like he's been sent out to win the nomination for his wife. Unfortunately now that Hulk Hogan has formally endorsed Senator Obama, that seems increasingly unlikely.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Florida Primary Results

First off, my favorite result. Hillary Clinton won 50% of the vote in
Florida in a crushing victory over Barack Obama and John Edwards,
picking up... oh yeah, ZERO delegates. Hillary's two big wins came in
Michigan and Florida, states which were stripped of all their delegates
by the DNC for holding primaries before Feb 5, with no other candidates
actually running in the state. In her other primary wins in Nevada and
New Hampshire, she still came away with less delegates than Obama and so
far the only place she's winning is in Washington and on CNN, but
nevertheless Hillary Clinton has officially "won" the Florida primary.
Fortunately next Tuesday a huge number of delegates will be up for
grabs, and the whole thing gets real.

In the Republican Primary, Rudy Giuliani had staked his whole campaign
on a win in Florida the way Fred Thompson and John Edwards were counting
on South Carolina. Instead, John McCain won the primary with 36% of the
vote, taking all of Florida's remaining 57 delegates (half of Florida's
delegates were stripped by the RNC for holding an early primary, which
is less exciting than it sounds). Mitt Romney came in second with 31%,
and Giuliani and Mike Huckabee were well out of it with 15% and 14% of
the vote respectively, with Ron Paul scooping up most of the rest.

This may mean Giuliani has to drop out of the race and narrow it down
even further, if losing in Florida means his financing dries up.
(Candidates will run as long as people will give them money, donors stop
giving when their candidate can't win.) Mike Huckabee is solidifying
his hold on third place, and the races seems to be settling down to
McCain vs Romney and Hillary vs Barack, with Huckabee and Edwards
holding onto third place and representing particular interests (poor
people and people who think I'm going to hell, respectively).

The third place candidates can stay in it because they have the
opportunity to swing the whole thing if there's a tight race and nobody
has the nomination locked up going into the convention. There is a lot
of speculation that Edwards won't give up his delegates without a vice
presidential spot, which is more likely to work for Clinton than for
Obama (who really doesn't need another charismatic one-term senator on
the ticket). If Huckabee can deliver a lot of Christian values voters
and a significant number of delegates, he can demand a cabinet position
and wield influence over the vice presidential nomination as well. So
this should be fun if either one survives Super Tuesday with a
significant number of delegates and fund-raising in place.

Election coverage will continue next Wednesday morning.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Three Things Amstelbooij is Not Allowed to Buy

1. Gasoline

Powering up the DMX requires some sort of super-premium rocket fuel refined in Switzerland with flecks of gold mixed into it, and with the huge premium attached to buying gas in Cook County scraping together enough coin for a fill-up is harder than dubbing Nicholas Cage's movies into Cantonese. I wondered why he did all those triathlons, now I know it's because at $17.86 a mile he ain't going by car.

2. Pr0n

Still can't hide it from the lady of the house, still sending me to Keg & Cask for the latest copy of Inches.

3. The Torch

Wicked Lasers has come out with a new 4,100 lumen flashlight which is for the time being the brightest thing on the market, and god help us if Amstelboy gets ahold of one. The damn thing is so powerful the beam will light paper on fire, and the instruction video should have $@%&'ing Yoda in it for a beam that hot. The last thing we need is a remote detonation system for fireworks dropping into Amstelboy's hands, so he has absolutely got to be stopped from dropping $300 on one, blinding people and engulfing the north side in flames. To find out more there's an article on slashdot, and to see the insanity of this thing for yourself here's a video of The Torch being used to light a cigarette.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Apparently I'm not the only one pissed about Eli Manning going to the Superbowl

Obama wins in South Carolina

Just in case anybody was wondering, Barack Obama won the South Carolina Primary, which is noteworthy for its significant proportion of black voters. Consequently it's not surprising that Obama would do well, but it might put to rest the idea that black voters were going to abandon Obama for the Clintons because Bill Clinton is more genuinely "black" than Barack. Instead Senator Obama won the primary with 55% of the vote and an enormous turn-out of black voters, 80% of whom voted for Obama.

White South Carolina voters split on the white candidates with the men going to Edwards and the women to Clinton, and Edwards could have used a win in South Carolina to make himself a viable candidate, but he still came in third (again). Hillary Clinton really got hit with the backlash of Bill Clinton's attacks on Obama and attempts to make race a heavy issue, and amazingly she still has yet to come up with more delegates than Obama in any venue other than the DNC.

Up next is Florida, the last primary before Super Tuesday.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Fred Thompson withdraws candidacy

Finally, after months of anticipation, something significant has
actually come out of the primary system. Fred Thompson had been
counting on a win in South Carolina to make him a legitimate candidate
for president, and it didn't happen. He came in third and secured no
delegates, and my guess is this dried up his finance, leading to his
withdrawal from the race. There's a lot of other speculation about what
he might do now including the possibility that he'll endorse Senator
McCain, but unfortunately I think his gig as the DA on Law & Order is
gone. So it's down to McCain, Romney, Huckabee, and Giuliani as
potentially viable candidates for the presidency.

The only other real result so far has been John Edwards' inability to do
much more than hang around, pick up some delegates here and there and
make speeches. This leaves Barack and Hillary as the only foreseeable
nominees, with John McCain the only Republican who comes anywhere near
beating them in polls. On the other hand, it's only #$%@'ing January so
I don't know who's taking those polls seriously.

This Saturday is the South Carolina Democratic Primary, and given South
Carolina's large number of black voters and the racial tension stirred
up around Martin Luther King Day between Barack and Hillary, this should
be fun. Oh yeah, that was the other thing we've learned so far, Hillary
hung onto the Hispanic vote in Nevada, and this makes the Florida
Primary next Tuesday a lot of fun as well. And rest assured, I will be
here to share all the results and pretend I know what's going on.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

John Randle training video

It's been ten years since this commercial came out, but I still think it's funny. And I love that John Randle does his arts and crafts work in uniform.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Timberwolves 109 - 108 Warriors

Who put a quarter in Ryan Gomes? The Timberwolves starters dropped 102
points on the Warriors, including 35 from Gomes. In recent weeks he's
been quietly productive, until he went crazy in the first half tonight,
propping the Wolves up until Jefferson got going late.

When the Wolves kept being stymied by the Warriors draw and kick moves
in transition, and kept building leads only to give them away, I never
thought they'd break their ridiculous road losing streak, but it clearly
makes a huge difference when somebody in the front court steps up
besides Big Al.

6-34, and upwardly mobile! (Okay, not really.)

Sunday, January 20, 2008

World of Warcraft gold limit reached

I've never played World of Warcraft, but I did think this was kind of
interesting, given all the strange moneymaking behavior that has gone on
in MMORPGs in recent years. Apparently because of the use of signed
integers (I have no idea what that means), there is a 2^31 upper limit
on the amount of gold a character can have, and you can't accumulate
more than 2,147,483,648 gold pieces or coins or whatever. This has
interesting implications for inflation in the WoW economy, and just the
fact that somebody kept playing so long they stretched the limits of the
system has other, sadder implications.

Just for some perspective, this limit is still 2^21, or 2097152 times
greater than the Captain vs Amstelboy chess tournament limit which
concluded at 2^10, after the Captain failed to recover his initial wager
after ten rounds of double or nothing.

Nuggets 111 - 108 Timberwolves

I know the Timberwolves need to keep losing games since they only have a
3-game lead for a top 4 draft pick (the Wolves will never win the
lottery with Miami, Seattle, New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia all in
it), but this is getting ridiculous. Some improvement or consistency
would be nice... right now I know three things going into a Wolves game:
Al Jefferson will get 20 and 10, Rashad McCants will foul out, and the
Wolves will lose. So here's my wish list for the Wolves in the new year.

1. McCants playing better defense

Hopefully Rashad McCants might learn to play smarter defense and quit
committing stupid fouls. He and Al Jefferson are the only consistent
scoring threats (in the NBA you really need three), and when McCants
gets in foul trouble the Wolves are completely screwed.

2. Better shooting from Telfair

Maybe Sebastian Telfair will discover the backboard, or maybe just sneak
up and loosen the rims at Target Center. Telfair is the team's only
healthy point guard, he's light and quick, but he can't get anything
into the hoop, missing lay-ups and not making anyone respect his jump
shot. Even on a full strength team, I really think Telfair could be a
dangerous change of pace off the bench if his shooting was just a bit
better. (Telfair shot better last night and the Wolves were in it until
the final whistle.)

3. 3-point shooting

I wish somebody could hit an outside shot on a regular basis. Every
once in a while somebody in our small forward logjam goes nuts showing
off their three point range, but then they don't play for a week. For a
team that has one threat: Al Jefferson in the post, it's frustrating
when teams feel free to pack the paint. (Again, 45.5% from 3-point
range last night and the Wolves lost in the last minute.)

4. Consistent play at forward

If some roles could be assigned to one of the various forwards the
Timberwolves have accumulated, that would certainly be nice. Currently
they seem to have a lot of role players who've decided they aren't an
important part of the team so whatever they do is gravy. McCants has
decided he's a scoring leader, Telfair and Jaric that they're
play-makers, but I can't figure out what half this team is doing.

5. A center, my kingdom for a center

There should be at least one shot-blocker on this team with the height
and weight to keep people out of the paint, but usually Doleac shows up
to the game in a suit, and Theo Ratliff is still coming back from surgery.

6. No more lazy veterans

Antoine Walker occasionally has some big games but it seems the
Timberwolves are like a AAA rehab assignment for him, and he still can't
play two games in a row. Greg Buckner shows little interest in Wolves
games when he plays, and I really can't blame him, but he does have
another year on his contract. Next summer that makes them both trade
bait to a team looking to clear cap room, but I really hoped they'd play
well enough to get them out of here before the trade deadline. I'd
rather watch Gerald Green and Corey Brewer flail around, because at
least they have upside.

7. Clear the hospital wing

Between Madsen, Foye, Ratliff, and whatever the hell is wrong with
Walker and Doleac, and whatever rookie wall Brewer and Richard hit,
that's a lot of options gone. Some of them weren't so great anyways,
but Foye and Ratliff might help this team immensely in terms of
consistency and post presence. I hope nothing bad happens to Al
Jefferson, because he's the only consistently solid player on the team,
and without him they have almost no presence in the paint.

8. A front office that knows what it's doing

Next summer is going to be huge, as cap room is cleared and decisions
are made about which players to re-sign. Free agents have to be brought
in to fill gaping holes, and there should be a huge decision to make on
draft day. Considering our current GM gave up the rookie of the year
for cash and drafted Ndudi Ebi out of high school so he could wear a
suit to games for three years while collecting three times as much money
as the Wolves got for trading away Brandon Roy, I'd like to hope there
would be some fresh blood in the war room.

9. Lucky ping pong balls

The Wolves are unlikely to get the #1 pick, but I hope they at least get
a lottery pick instead of dropping back to #4, because that would annoy
the hell out of me.

Annoying 2008 Election Update: SC & NV

The Republicans:

For those of you who turn exclusively to Absolut Rufus for your election
news, John McCain has won the South Carolina primary. In this case
winning matters: McCain's 33% of the vote won him 19 of 24 delegates,
with Mike Huckabee's 30% second place finish winning him only 5. (The
state party was stripped of half of its 47 delegates for holding an
early primary.) Fred Thompson and Mitt Romney got most of the rest of
the votes, but no delegates.

Meanwhile in Nevada, Mitt Romney spanked everyone with 51% of the vote
and 18 of 31 delegates, but everyone picked up a couple delegates.
Shockingly, lunatic fringe libertarian congressman Ron Paul came in
second, but he's also the only one to buy TV ads in the state.

Here are the updated delegate counts, as near as I can figure:

Mitt Romney 72
John McCain 38
Mike Huckabee 29
Fred Thompson 8
Ron Paul 6
Rudy Giuliani 2
Duncan Hunter 1

There are a couple of consequences to these results, one of which is
that since South Carolina was supposed to be the state that kicked off
Thompson's campaign, so picking up no delegates and getting about half
the support of McCain and Huckabee is bad. The second result is nobody
has any clue what's going to happen in the Republican party right now,
because McCain, Huckabee, and Romney have all won primaries, and Rudy
Giuliani (who still has less delegates than Ron Paul) may change the
dynamic again if he does well in Florida.

The third result I found interesting is the failure of Mike Huckabee's
two big SC messages: change the constitution to reflect the will of God
(don't worry, I'll tell you what it is), and I love the Confederate
flag. He can't possibly win a general election threatening to stick a
flagpole up the ass of anyone who decries a racist symbol and being the
pro-theocracy candidate, and Republican voters are going to figure that
out. (Isn't that why we're supposed to fight the War on Terror, to
prevent the rise of a caliphate that would impose theocratic rule over
the West?)

The Democrats:

The South Carolina Democratic Primary isn't for another week, but the
results are in from the Nevada Caucus. It turns out Hillary Clinton won
the primary... sort of. She won just over half the vote, but because
delegates are assigned proportionally by each county, she and Obama
split the votes in Clark County down the middle, and Obama won many
outlying counties with odd numbers of delegates, meaning when it came
time to allocate the 25 national delegates, the odd delegate went to
Obama. So Hillary won the primary, Obama won more delegates. (If you
would like the special math of the Democratic Party explained to you,
ask the Captain, I just report what the AP tells me.)

Here are the update delegate counts, as near as I can figure:

Hillary Clinton 210
Barack Obama 123
John Edwards 52
Dennis Kucinich 1
Mike Gravel 0

Hillary and Obama continue to split delegates in the regional contests,
and her lead is down to greater support by superdelegates in the
national party, so anything can still happen.

Up Next:

Democrats vote in South Carolina on Saturday, January 26, in a primary
very heavy with black voters, so this could be interesting following
Hillary Clinton's recent missteps on Martin Luther King and all the
racial issues stirred up recently. Next Tuesday January 29 is the
Florida Primary, when Giuliani enters the race, and the last primary
before Super Tuesday.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

The Primary System Explained part one: The Democrats

For the education of those not native to the United States and the mechanics of its singular electoral system, or for those who have been sipping espresso and eating cheese fondue on a jewel encrusted office chair in Switzerland so long they've forgotten how their government works, I have decided to provide a brief explanation of the whole system, and of upcoming events. Unfortunately, since I don't understand it all either either I will have to resort to mostly pulling this all out of my ass.

There are three peculiarities to understand: the nomination, the candidates, and the contests.

The Nomination:


By all accounts, the American primary system appears very strange to the rest of the world, who find a year-long election rather excessive. Sometimes I wish the rest of the world would take into account the fact that we aren't electing the leader of an (effectively) unicameral parliamentary legislature who can be recalled at any time by a vote of no confidence, but rather an independent executive with authority over the greatest economic and military power in the history of human civilization, but that isn't the point here; the point is, this isn't an election.

Every political party in the world chooses its candidates before an election, and usually this is done by the party leaders in a smoke filled room with the door firmly barred. In the United States, at this time, it's largely done out in the open by a popular vote of members of that party. The Democratic Party does this by a vote of 4,049 delegates to the Democratic National Convention, with the first candidate to secure 2,025 delegates being nominated to run for President of the United States, at which point they may choose their own candidate for Vice President. Most of the delegates (3,253) are assigned by a proportional vote in each state, and the remaining 796 "super-delegates" are composed of Democrats holding federal office as well as various other party luminaries.

The Candidates:

Several have dropped out already, like Bill Richardson, Joe Biden, and Christopher Dodd. Really there are only three serious candidates for the nomination, and four who get any news coverage at all. Consequently, I'll tell you all about Mike Gravel until he gets at least one single solitary delegate to commit for him, and in the meantime here's some info on the other four. (Not all of this information is accurate, but I should hope it's obvious what parts I just made up.)

Hillary Clinton: Senator from New York

Signature Move: Morph
Fatality: Soultaker

Hillary Clinton has spent the last 17 years in Washington as First Lady in the Clinton Administration (you may have heard of her husband, he had a fondness for cigars and that orange drink NASA used to make) and as the junior senator from New York State. After a disastrous beginning in the White House with an ego-driven national health care initiative, she has built a reputation in the Senate for quietly building bipartisan support for more modest initiatives. Considered the chosen candidate of the national party, she often appears to be glaring at Barack Obama for daring to run against her.


Barack Obama: Senator from Illinois
Signature Move: Blade Spin
Fatality: Decapitation


Barack Obama is the junior senator from Illinois, running on a platform of thoughtfulness, charisma, and inexperience. That last one is supposed to be a positive, because he isn't caught up in an entangling network of Washington political relationships and brings a fresh perspective. On the other hand, he reportedly never learned the rules of the Senate because he started running for president as soon as he realized he was the only politician in America who doesn't appear to be lying through gritted teeth every time he speaks. His greatest political influence so far is in his father's native Kenya, where Senator Baraka has been trying to use his goodwill to prevent civil war and the spread of AIDS. (I also blame him for making me break down and buy an I-Pass.)

John Edwards: Former Senator from North Carolina
Signature Move: Shadow Uppercut
Fatality: Torso Rip

John Edwards is a former senator who didn't run for reelection because he was pursuing the vice presidency in 2004. Before politics, his career as a medical malpractice attorney was bouyed by his uncanny ability to speak with the dead. His campaign is focused on delivering an eloquent anti-poverty message while tossing his sexy, perfectly coiffed mane (I assume he didn't get that $400 haircut from Juan). Edwards is running third but counting on momentum from being the only southerner in the South Carolina primary, and should Hillary or Baraka stumble, he will be the only charismatic white man with a law degree the party can turn to.

Dennis Kucinich: Congressman from Ohio

Signature Move: Invisibility
Fatality: Uppercut Decapitation


Dennis Kucinich has basically no chance of getting elected to anything, because his politics are too far to the left and he isn't ashamed of that fact. Kucinich is running to be heard, not to be elected, and honestly I only include him out of respect for anyone, right or wrong, who will take the amount of ridicule he does for the opportunity to speak on a national stage. To access Congressman Kucinich, seen here being decapitated by Baraka, pull down on both joysticks when the "toasty" guy appears on screen.

The Contests

The primary system theoretically acts in concert with several other aspects of American government dating from its origin as a union of several independent colonial governments, to protect against the rise of powerful pluralities and make it so the entire country has to be considered in federal politics. It also theoretically acts to screen candidates by making them go through a series of small contests in a variety of regions with different types of voters, letting party voters get to know their candidates before committing their vote. Theoretically. One of the other major benefits is by winning individual state party primaries, a candidate can prove they're capable of getting votes, and this in turn allows them to raise enough money to win.

There are two types of event to consider: caucuses and primaries. A caucus consists of a bunch of people getting together on the precinct level in small groups and choosing delegates to send to county caucuses, who then choose the delegates for a state caucus. A primary is just an election for all voters in a party. Some primaries are open, and some require that you be registered in that party. In Minnesota, we have both, and non-binding caucuses in the winter help determine who the party endorses for offices, while a fall primary chooses the final nominee, and anybody is free to vote in any party's primary. Confused yet?

Basically however states decide what to do, delegates are assigned by a proportional vote. This means all the talk in the media about who "won" is kind of silly, for instance Obama and Clinton got the same number of delegates from New Hampshire, despite her "winning" by 3% of the vote. The other part of the race, the super-delegates, are free to announce who they're voting for, but haven't all done so.

Iowa & New Hampshire

The traditional first two contests are Iowa and New Hampshire, where because of all the time candidates have to put in, they get out and talk to real people in the street. Simply put, Iowa is a bunch of thoughtful farmers who love ethanol tax credits, and New Hampshire is a bunch of white New England revolutionaries who hate the government. Doing well in Iowa made Obama look like he could actually win, so this helps when he goes to other states. Getting 39% of the vote in New Hampshire kept Hillary from going down in flames. Getting any delegates kept John Edwards alive going into South Carolina, and getting no delegates made everyone else but Dennis Kucinich and Mike Gravel drop out.

Michigan & Florida Primary

The Democrats agreed that only four caucuses and primaries (IA, NH, NV, SC) could be held before Super Tuesday (Feb 5), and then Michigan and Florida jumped in ahead of South Carolina without permission. Consequently the party stripped both states of all their delegates, and the primaries are just for show (this is on the Democratic side only!) Major candidates except Hillary Clinton dropped out of the Michigan Primary, and running unopposed she came in with 56% of the vote, with 40% voting "uncommitted" or "undecided" (and the last 4% going to Kucinich and Gravel). It remains to be seen what will happen in the now symbolic Florida Primary, or whether Florida's lawsuit to keep their delegates will succeed.

Nevada & South Carolina

Now that a couple predominantly white, northern states where prostitution is illegal have weighed in on the Democratic nominee, you may be wondering when the rest of you get a chance to be heard. To address that, the party has early primaries in Nevada and South Carolina. Nevada (that's the one that looks like a box-cutter and has gambling) is the first western state to vote and has a significant enough proportion of Latino voters to allow candidates to specifically appeal to the national Latino vote by courting Nevada Latinos. Also, I would think the Nevada primary would allows candidates to get out the prostitute vote nationally, but the media hasn't really picked up on that aspect. (For the life of me I can't imagine who I know in the Democratic Party who would push for a prostitute-heavy early primary... I'll have to ask the Captain about that one.)

The South Carolina Democratic Primary is important because it draws out a lot of black voters, and it's the first primary in the South. John Edwards is counting heavily on South Carolina to make him a viable candidate, and Barack Obama gets to prove he can carry black voters and hopefully put to rest all the whispers about whether he's really black enough. Based on what I've seen in previous years, it appears the Klansmen vote in the other primary.

Super Tuesday

This is the first day any state can schedule a Democratic primary, and 22 states are having one, including New York, California, Minnesota (caucus) and Illinois (primary), allocating over half the delegates (2,075) on a single day. If you have US citizenship and you live in one of these states, you should get your ass off that jewel-encrusted office chair you smuggled out of Switzerland, get out and vote.

The Race So Far:

Regional Delegates:
Obama 25
Clinton 24
Edwards 18
Everybody else: ZERO

As a point of curiosity, Obama is still slightly ahead after the first two primaries, and he and Hillary have each "won" one, without really pulling ahead of Edwards, but as I said, 2,075 delegates are at stake on Super Tuesday and there are 796 super-delegates, so 25-24 is a pretty ephemeral lead.

Super-delegates: (of 3,253)
Clinton 166
Obama 78
Edwards 33
Kucinich 1
Everybody else: ZERO

As expected, the national party loves Hillary and she has more super-delegates publicly committed to support her. It's worth noting that as federal elected officials, Clinton, Obama, and Kucinich are all super-delegates themselves, as is former President Clinton. I mention this because I assume that's how Kucinich got a delegate.

Total delegates: (of 4,049)
Clinton 190
Obama 103
Edwards 51
Kucinich 1
Everybody else: ZERO

So despite what you hear about primaries won and lost, Hillary has a near 2-1 lead, but ten times as many delegates are at stake on Super Tuesday and there are still 500 uncommitted super-delegates who might start picking sides after South Carolina and Nevada, or pile on the front-runner after Super Tuesday. I will do my best to keep you all apprised.

The Primary System Explained part two: The Republicans

I rambled on at length explaining the primary system in my post about the Democrats, so on the Republican side I'll just confine myself to explaining the candidates and aspects of the upcoming primaries particular to the Republican Party, who have some different caucus dates and different approaches to punishing states for early primaries. I'm also ignoring Duncan Hunter because I don't have the slightest clue who he is, as well as professional sacrificial lamb Alan Keyes.

The Candidates:

Mitt Romney: former Governor of Massacheusetts Signature Moves: lightning bolt, teleport Fatality: Electrocution

Edgy for being a Masshole, a Mormon, and a Republican, in addition to serving one term as governor of Massacheusetts, Romney was CEO of the Salt Lake Olympics, and is apparently also from Michigan. I think his plan is to win the nomination by virtue of being from everywhere.


Mike Huckabee: former Governor of Arkansas
Signature Move: flying kick Fatality: Dragon

A strong showing in Iowa set up this showdown between Romney and Huckabee as the "change" candidates for the Republicans. He's also the devoutly Christian candidate, which hasn't played as well in later primaries. I honestly haven't been paying that much attention to Huckabee, since the whole constant reference to Jesus thing hasn't worked out too well in American politics. If he can't keep something going, he may fade back into the margins as the Christian conservative candidate.

John McCain: Senator from Arizona
Signature Move: ice ball
Fatality: spine rip

Because of the debilitating injuries he suffered in a POW camp during the Vietnam War, John McCain can't raise his arms over his head to comb his own hair. He is the oldest candidate, with a reputation for integrity and a record of pursuing campaign finance reform.

Fred Thompson: former Senator from Tennessee Signature Moves: leaping stomp, chest pound, spinning slaps, tremor pound

Fred Thompson is a former actor who's very good at acting presidential, best known for his recurring role as the New York County DA on Law & Order. He entered the race late and so far has made no real splash.

Ron Paul: Texas Congressman
Signature Moves: invisibility, spits venom
Fatality: Acid Puke

Ron Paul is a strongly libertarian candidate who is generally ignored by the national media. He has raised a lot of money on the internet, voicing the libertarian perspective. Unfortunately in terms of mainstream politics, his views are quite nutty, for instance he wants to bring home all 600,000 American troops overseas. He's not going to win the Republican nomination, but he's interesting.

Rudy Giuliani: Mayor of New York City on 9/11
Signature Moves: Bloody Spear
Fatality: Toasty!


In his tenure as mayor, Rudy Giuliani presided over the revitalization of the city, but has based his candidacy on the perception that he expertly managed the crisis on 9/11, to the point where Fred Thompson accused Giuliani of working 9/11 into every sentence. Giuliani has claimed disinterest in the early primaries, and is counting on a big win in Florida to start his campaign.

The Delegates, and the Primary Results:

The Republican nomination process is simpler than the Democratic process, with no super-delegates, and 2,380 delegates assigned by state, with 1,191 needed to win. The primaries and caucuses have been as follows, without all caucus results being binding. (Yes, American elections are a mess to figure out, why do you think we don't vote?)

Iowa: Mike Huckabee had critical early success here, but Mitt Romney also came out of Iowa with a fair number of delegates.

Wyoming: The party stripped Wyoming of half its delegates as punishment for holding an early caucus, and not all of Wyoming's delegates have been assigned, but Romney won here.

New Hampshire: This established John McCain as serious again, as far as the national media was concerned. Again, Romney came in second and picked up delegates.

Michigan: Stripped of half their delegates, Michigan was still important, as Mitt Romney built on his lead by winning and scooping most of the state's delegates.

The important upcoming events are the Nevada Caucuses and the South Carolina Primary this weekend, and then after that the Florida Primary where Giuliani will get into the race for real.

So far, these are the estimated delegate totals, with 1,191 needed to win:

Mitt Romney - 54
Mike Huckabee - 22
John McCain - 15
Fred Thompson - 6
Ron Paul - 2
Rudy Giuliani - 1
Duncan Hunter - 1

So basically only Romney has been in every primary and had any momentum, Huckabee and McCain need to prove they aren't going to flame out after the single primary they each put all their money into, and Giuliani and Thompson need their big debut events (FL and SC) to get started. We're only 5% of the way through this, though.

Monday, January 07, 2008

Signs you're reading a bad movie review, vol. 3

#3: DVD Details

Anybody who mentions the transfer quality almost certainly will not tell you anything about the film, because they think in the mindset of film lovers who've seen it 88 times and are just looking for a new latest and greatest version. They're speaking (as geeks so often do) only to people exactly like them who don't need to be told if Michelangelo Antonioni's Blow-Up is a good film (it is) they just need to know are there any scratches on the print?

Also included in this group are anybody who mentions the DVD extras. I've enjoyed the commentary tracks on a number of DVDs, notably Joss Whedon pointing out continuity errors in his own work then sheepishly apologizing for ruining the movie, and if you love a movie, it is interesting to see more about how it was made. However, anybody reviewing the DVD extras, or pretty much even watching any of them, is usually unable to give a neutral review, and even if they could they won't... like the DVD transfer guy, they're a geek who thinks only in terms of people like themselves to even be bringing up the DVD extras on a rental website.

Sample review:

I was excited to finally get a definitive release of The Third Man on DVD, only to have it ruined by a harmonic reverberation in my home theater from the twang of the zither music, an issue that frankly should have been fixed by sound engineers for a 50th anniversary release, as well as cleaning up some of the numerous scratches and pops in the soundtrack for a modern audience with 7.1 channel audio systems. Don't waste your time.

Best movie endings of 2007, vol. 3

Ocean's 13

Just because it was funny... George Clooney and Brad Pitt give each other a self-aware parting shot to close out their final caper, in a film crammed with all the glib excess of a farewell tour. Settle down and have a couple of kids, indeed.

The Bourne Ultimatum

I enjoyed this movie immensely as the conclusion to this series which begins with the blank slate of Bourne's amnesia and keeps adding more and more levels of intrigue. The final film turns reflexively to the beginning, recreating many of the first film's most striking scenes but playing them out differently (a fact lost on a lot of the audiences who couldn't figure out the point of the hair-dying scene is that it doesn't end with hot espionage sex). The Ouroborosian final shot of Bourne, back in the water unconscious the way he started the first film, is broken by the scene of Nicky watching the news report on the climactic shootout, and when when she hears no body was found and pictures Jason swimming away... when that teary smirk breaks across her face, I couldn't help but grin with her.

Sunday, January 06, 2008

Signs you're reading a bad movie review, vol. 2

#2: The use of the word "slow"

Nobody who describes movies as “slow” ever has anything meaningful to say about them, or gets the point, often because they didn't finish watching the movie. It's one thing to report pacing problems, or an excess of distracting subplots (see Fred Claus). But for some reason when people say a movie is “slow”, especially with heavy emphasis, they never seem to be able to express themselves in a more sophisticated way about any other aspect of the film, or communicate in any sense if it's atmospheric, if it lingers in silence over certain shots, if it's long in developing it's core plot... most often it means there just isn't enough tense, expository dialogue.

Sample Review:

Slooooooooooooooooowww. Shut it off after 15 minutes.

Saturday, January 05, 2008

Best movie endings of 2007, vol. 2

Black Book

When the first scene of Black Book is set in Israel, as the recollections of a middle-aged teacher confronted with a face from a past that's twenty-five years ago and a thousand miles away, I assumed it was just the same tired narrative device I feel like I've seen in a thousand tedious biopics. I figured it was either that or the “Hey remember back when...” framing device used for events of great historical import as an attempt to ground them in the modern world, like an aged Private Ryan visiting a French cemetery.

In Zwartboek, there is instead this underlying sense that Rachel would prefer to never in her daily life see any reminders of the events that took place in Arnhem in the early 40's, or her role in the Dutch resistance, but it is not clear at the beginning if this is meant simply to heighten the gravity of the oncoming flashback (which is hardly necessary for this film). In the final moments of the film, Rachel concludes her day and heads home amidst air raid sirens into a kibbutz lined with barbed wire, as her new home, is either enmired in the Yom Kibbur War or soon will be. I felt this overwhelming sadness for Rachel, seeing her walk in past guard towers and gates, like an inverted concentration camp where Jews went to stay alive and erected barbed wire fences to keep others out. The sense I felt was that while Holland had long since moved on and had joined a pact to never allow the horror of war to sweep over Europe again, Rachel lives in the one place in the world where World War II never ended, where the Holocaust loomed over her new country's birth and in '73 had to seem to somebody who suffered like Rachel that it was finally concluding with the violent end of the Jewish state.

So her evasiveness, her reluctance to admit to being Rachel from Arnhem, possibly even to seeing herself that way, may indicate that she is unable to look back at the war and the Holocaust because she for her they didn't end with the liberation of Arnhem. That theme is clear in the film, as all of Holland celebrates and children and hot chicks all pile onto American tanks to ride through town, while Rachel's resistance cell continues their hunt for traitors. I didn't really connect all that until I started thinking about the ending, which was interesting.

Zodiac

The closing music and the final line of Zodiac gave me one of the only real chills I had in the entire film, since I seem to have developed an allergy to slavishly sequential cultural and historical mimesis that really took me out of the film (if I just wanted to know what happened next I could have watched one of the fifty-seven documentaries or read one of I'm sure countless books written on the subject). Notably none of the big stars were in the scene, which returns to the stark and grisly murder that serves as the film's opening, as the surviving witness identifies his attacker from a photo array. The affected flatness of his reaction, studying the face and commenting on features, before calmly concluding “...the last time I saw that face was in 1967 when he shot me,” giving way to Donovan's “Hurdy Gurdy Man” and the closing credits, sent the second chill up my spine (the first is when Jake Gyllenhaal realizes he's talking to a man with a basement).

Despite all the diversions and obsessions of the film, and the random irrelevance of the actual crimes that Robert Downey Jr expounds on during the film, there is a specter that lingers over the case and the film, a dull and unreasoning yet grimly elusive bogey man whose spirit was never laid to rest. (And of course the chill Minnesota wind picks up as I write this and I hear noises from downstairs that I hope were my windows creaking... I really need to stop getting into creepy topics and slighting serial killers right before going to bed.)

Friday, January 04, 2008

Nuggets 118 - 107 Timberwolves

Apparently if you don't really bother with transition defense or keeping an eye out for back door cuts (the Nuggets made copious use of the alley-oop), winning an NBA game becomes harder than dubbing Nicholas Cage into Cantonese. Marcus Camby reminded Wolves fans that our front court is a little light by smacking every one of Craig Smith's early shots right back into his face (7 blocks for the game), and it took Big Al quite a while to get going as well. Since the Nuggets started two point guards I would have thought Marko Jaric would do something with his significant size advantage over Allen Iverson on the offensive end to compensate, but apparently not.

You'd think on a night when Big Al and Rashad McCants scored big, and somebody put a quarter in Ryan Gomes and he offers that rare (for the Wolves) third scoring option with a perimeter shot, you'd be able to stay in a game. The refs for once gave the Wolves the benefit of the doubt and called a fair game, but the first few minutes watching lay-up after lay-up and clanging shots gave the Nuggets a lead they never relinquished.

I still can't figure out the Wolves line-up, where players appear and disappear on a whim. I expect point guard and center to be a little screwed up because of injuries, but whatever happened to Gerald Green? Given a lack of depth at point guard, the Wolves started both healthy point guards, brought their best shooting guard off the bench (McCants), barely played Buckner, and completely benched Green. Maybe it was match-ups, benching Corey Brewer and playing bigger forwards, but it was a weird line-up, and it's a different one every night.

Randy Foye, Mark Madsen, and Theo Ratliff all show up to the game in suits, Antoine Walker, Greg Buckner, and Michael Doleac don't seem to be able to contribute many minutes. Ryan Gomes, Corey Brewer, and Gerald Green all seem to have decided to be swing-men and role players who can just throw in a little here and there, and Craig Smith and Chris Richard really are role players at power forward. That leaves the inconsistent point guard duo of Telfair and Jaric, the slashing scoring of McCants (sometimes), and Big Al trying to go one against four in the post with no perimeter threats. Half the team can't or won't play, and the ones that can don't complement each other: a catch and shoot guy, or a spot-up three point shooter would go nuts playing off of Bash and Big Al (good thing we traded our last one to appease Garnett). Wait 'til next year I guess, when Buckner, Walker, and possibly Green and Gomes will all hit the bricks, Foye might be back, and the Wolves will have the 4th and 31st draft picks and a shit-load of cap room to build around Foye and Big Al.

This year, they're going to stay in contention for the worst record in the history of professional basketball in America... they need to lose 74 games to clinch the record, and tonight was #28. They won't make it (I hope) but if they continue winning one game out of 8, it's going to be awfully close.

Best movie endings of 2007, vol. 1

I recently went over this year's list of Oscar eligible films and really confronted how few films I saw last year. In order to turn over a new leaf, I thought I could honor the year coming to a close by looking back at the ten best film endings of 2007. So in no particular order, here are the first two, a couple of closing moments remarkable for their excesses, in both humor and horror.

Death Proof (major spoilers)

I think this entire film was built in reverse starting with a theme captured best in one shot that kicks off the closing credits: Rosario Dawson lifting her leg straight out as far as she can, and dropping a daring heel right onto Kurt Russell's head. Each segment of the film serves to add, one piece at a time, all the elements Tarantino needed to set up his final scene, using an entire half of the film to flesh out early victims so he can create real jeopardy at the climax. All that work means his heroines' sudden reversal makes for one of the most visceral grrrl power moments in cinema without trite misandry. And I positively giggled when Rosario dropped that heel on Stuntman Mike, that was just a fucking good time.

Hostel part II

Obviously what was most remarkable about Hostel part II was really the opening, in that it got to the point a hell of a lot quicker than the first installment (which tried to keep restless teenagers in their seats with an increasingly tedious parade of bland boob shots). But I did enjoy the ending, in which a film franchise that seemed to take itself way more seriously than human reason could permit finally just threw up its hands and admitted how silly it is to watch a movie about a resort created to relieve the ennui of sociopaths. When Beth shows up as the Grim Reaper with a scythe, and the violins start keeping time to the cute but menacing children playing soccer with a hot chick's head I had to laugh, and that burst of silliness was like a sweet (but gory) dessert to sweep away the taste of a very over-seasoned meal.

Next up (when I get around to it): Zodiac and Zwartboek

Thursday, January 03, 2008

Signs you're reading a bad movie review, vol. 1

My many years as a customer of online rental services like Netflix and Greencine, coupled with many wasted hours browsing Jump the Shark, Rotten Tomatoes, and the Internet Movie Database have given me a lot of time to read a random selection of people's comments on film and television, usually when I was trying to figure out if something was worth a rental. Unfortunately, a lot of these reviews just weren't very helpful, and I started to perceive some common elements of bad reviews that contained no insight or information, or were coming from a perspective so skewed or limited that their experience could never match my own. As a result I started to recognize a series of cues to stop reading or discount certain reviews, mostly brain-dead and negative but even some well-written and positive reviews. As a service to my vast readership, here is the first sign a movie reviewer has nothing of value to say.

#1: Any mention of who else was in the room

Often this goes into bad reviews, taking the form of “My wife and I were sitting on our couch and as soon as the movie was over we looked at each other and said,'Wow, Ben Affleck really can't act.'” For some reason “on the couch looking at each other” is a very popular meme in useless comments, but generally the more extraneous detail, the less the person actually has to say about the movie. Other forms include a long introduction about what theater they saw it in, and if it's an old movie the year and the crazy clothes they were wearing, but generally the actual direct commentary they make about the movie can be summarized in two words: “It rocked!” or “It sucked!” Longer comments are possible, but rarely more insightful. Also included as a subset of this is any recommendation of who to watch it with.

Sample review:


I saw this movie back at the old Chesterfield Theater on Wabash back in 1977, with my future ex-wife and her sister. As soon as the credits rolled, I hiked up my bellbottoms, brushed back my mullet and looked at my then girlfriend and the future bitch-in-law and said “You know what baby? After being with you, Star Wars is the coolest thing ever!” and it was true. And even my ex who was usually all cranky had a good time, so you know this is a good movie to watch with your girlfriend.

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Top 10 Business Seminars in 2008

The beginning of a new year is always a time for self-examination and self-improvement, unless like the Captain you're waiting for Chinese New Year. With that in mind, here's a bunch of tired inside jokes about business seminars I'm considering attending.

10. Who Moved My Cheese Fondue? Zug, Suisse

9. Who Moved My Cheese Onto My Head? Green Bay, WI

8. Who Cut My Cheese? Chicago, IL

7. Who Made My Swiss Cheese into a Bong? Bathroom at Little Tiajuana's, Minneapolis, MN

6. Who Moved My Lasagna? St. Paul Port Authority, St. Paul MN

5. Who Made My Cheese from Cow's Milk? Queens, NY

4. Who Moved My Orange Windmill Tie? Padova, Italia

3. Can I Feed Your Pussy Met Mijn Kaas?? Den Haag, Netherlands

2. Who Securitized My Cheese? (I was going to eat that!) Greenwich, CT

1. Cheese and Rice! London, Engle-land