Competitive people are most annoying to other competitive people.
Why I Love Mormonism – NYTimes.com
This is a casual prejudice that is not like the visceral hatred that plagued the early decades of Mormonism, […] but a symptom of a thoughtless incuriousness.
How to Stop Hospitals from Killing Us – WSJ.com
Mystic Pizza

Mystic Pizza. The ‘80s were a golden era for coming-of-age movies like this one. Really great job at undercutting the drama with humor and twisting some of the scenes and characters in really smart, unexpected ways. Also features a wee young Matt Damon in a small role!

“In Augusta, to photograph James Brown, these pictures were taken when he suggested we go for a ride. He told me he would show me ‘his town.’ So we jumped into an old car and drove around. He would stop the car when he saw someone sitting in their yard, run up, do the split, yell out, ‘I feel good,’ and jump back in the car and drive off. It was all so spontaneous and hilarious, and it took the onlookers by such surprise. Brown was a fun-loving character and a good sport.” Harry Benson, Photographer
Warrior

Warrior. Some plot points are about subtle as a kick to the head, but the power is there, too. Much, much better than I expected, thanks to a great cast (A.O. Scott: “These are tough guys, but you can only care about them if you believe that they can break.”) and a great pace. Ebert:
This is a rare fight movie in which we don’t want to see either fighter lose. That brings such complexity to the final showdown that hardly anything could top it — but something does.
Makers vs. takers
Many commentators are framing the matter in terms of raising or lowering the relative status of aid recipients. So it’s the aspiring student, the virtuous retiree, and the brave veteran, rather than the irresponsible bums. That’s a distraction (albeit a legitimate correction), as the real question is whether the political equilibrium is shifting toward takers. That’s takers as roles in particular political struggles, not individuals with “taker” stamped on their foreheads.
Various forms of crony capitalism arguably are on the rise. Is the political influence of the issue-specific takers, relative to the issue-specific makers, a growing problem in American politics? What does the evidence actually suggest?
Filed under: arguments. Cf. Charitable arguing:
Taking a moment to hunt for an interpretation that makes an argument good — before you denounce it as a bad argument — is a nice heuristic that forestalls the tempting leap from “There exists an interpretation that makes this a bad argument, but it may not be what he had in mind,” to “This is a bad argument!”
I think of children sort of like Voyager probes, except instead of sending them out into space you send them forward in time. They carry messages from your civilization inside them, on into the weirdness of the future.
The Terminator

The Terminator. I find it interesting mostly as a historical artifact. It’s adequate, but I’ll take T2 over it any day if I’m just looking for fun. It is amazing to see the progress in special effects we’ve made. A lot of the stuff in this movie looks really clunky now. Contrast with Aliens, where pretty much everything is still perfect. What a difference two years can make!
I know these are masterpieces, and you’re supposed to let their brilliance wash over you while you contemplate their significance, but I really couldn’t make myself stand there for more than a few seconds,” said museum-goer Vernon Bailey, admitting he spent more time reading the placards describing each painting than he did looking at the art itself. “They have all these Monets and Renoirs in there, but I made it through that entire wing in, like, five minutes. By the end I was just blowing past these iconic works—Nighthawks, American Gothic, that really famous pointillist one—and thinking, ‘Okay, done, done, done.’ What’s wrong with me?
The White Market – The New Inquiry
Interesting discussion of Breaking Bad…
The point isn’t that the show is unrealistic or hard to believe, but the narrative function of the ways in which it is: Which disbeliefs are viewers asked to suspend, and which ideologies are they encouraged to retain?
Truth and falsity properly considered are properties of language, not of images.
The Informant!

The Informant!. Soderbergh walks a fine line here with genre and mood. Can’t say I love it, but it’s got a great pace and the way the layers of lies and revelations and confusions and contortions pile up is a lot of fun. Excellent soundtrack, and Matt Damon totally proves himself.
My latest Soderbergh film rankings:
- Haywire
- Out of Sight
- Solaris
- Contagion
- The Informant!
- Ocean’s Eleven
- Ocean’s Twelve
- Ocean’s Thirteen
On PUBLIC ENEMIES. Part I: Charles Winstead, Mann’s Man « Cinema Truth
Iron Man 2

Iron Man 2. It’s really pretty when things are blowing up. Admittedly, it’s been a while since I’ve seen a movie with a lot of ‘splosions, so I’m behind on the state of the art. Lots of eye candy, though. The main villain face-offs felt really low-stakes and awkwardly paced. Really erratic writing. I felt like the first one was funnier? Captain America is still my favorite of the few Avengers movies I’ve seen.

MELANCHOLIA or, The Romantic Anti-Sublime | SEQUENCE 1.1 (2012) . Wonderful long, long essay on my favorite Von Trier film.
A great and very wide-ranging study of Lars von Trier’s recent film, one that touches on object-oriented ontology, feminist representation, contemporary film melodrama, the Sublime, non-normative filmmaking, as well as the end of the world.
What more could you ask for?
Payback

Payback. Well, no, it’s not particularly inventive. It’s noir-ish and singlemindedly goofy, if a bit one-note, with bonus points for creative violence. Mel Gibson is such a good blend of comedian and tough guy. (There’s a little bit of an aggrieved Bill Murray in there, mixed with something else). Shame that, with all his talent, he managed to torpedo his career of late.
Alzheimer’s could be the most catastrophic impact of junk food | The Guardian
The strong association between poor diets and poverty allows people to use this issue as a cipher for something else they want to say, which is less socially acceptable.
Alzheimer’s could be the most catastrophic impact of junk food | The Guardian
Surprise! It Is Easy to Crowdsource When You’re Famous | The American Conservative
The idealistic kids are funding the Establishment now.
Surprise! It Is Easy to Crowdsource When You’re Famous | The American Conservative
The Light by Which You See
Your beliefs will be the light by which you see, but they will not be what you see and they will not be a substitute for seeing.