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This is basically an interview with John Gaeta about the approach taken in the upcoming remake of Speed Racer. The movie looks great, and I’m such a fan of the Wachowski brothers that this is on my must see list. The Matrix and V for Vendetta are among my favorite movies in large part because of the visual and stylistic weight of their films.

3:56 am | 1 comment

Amazing. We have proof now, and yet… no major story on CNN.com
(via this site)

7:31 pm | leave a comment

Josh, there’s still time to save yourself. :)

12:01 pm | 1 comment

And PJ O’Rourke responds to Domenech’s goofiest explanation. I’m actually almost embarrassed for the guy at this point. When do you just fess up?

2:54 am | leave a comment

As I mentioned below, the Internet did it’s thing. The editor of the student paper that Domenech wrote for has been found (by the student newspaper).

2:52 am | leave a comment

About time. We’ve been getting ads from Yale-NH hospital and the local healthcare unions about this for a while. Looks like they finally came to a deal on the cancer center.

11:53 pm | leave a comment

I still think they’re partisan hacks, but even the Corner at NRO has issued an apology for the plagiarism committed by Ben Domenech when he wrote for them. They go through and actually pull out sample quotes and include them. The apology seems sincere. I’ve gained a lot of respect for them in this.

I’ve been thinking about this for a bit off and on over the last few days. I don’t want to read too much into a single situation, but most of what I’ve been thinking is how someone like Domenech believes they’ll get away with this type of behavior. This isn’t a Jayson Blair type who’s simply trying to make a reporting name for himself. This is a person who aims to create controversy and to provoke people that disagree with him.

One thing I’ve learned about the political blogosphere is that they are nothing if not vicious and thorough. Do something to irk the blogs and they will descend, en mass, onto Google, Yahoo, personal contacts and friends, and build a thorough catalog of your life. Domenech, a “prominent” member of this community and founder of Redstate.org, must know this.

So, knowing that folks like Media Matters would get PDFs of the actual print editions and that Google will turn up every electronic version of his articles, why did he continue to lie? Why?

Is it possible that he didn’t understand the severity of what he was doing? That changing a few words here and there still constitutes plagiarism? Nearly every English teacher I had in high school emphasized the importance of not plagiarizing others’ works. It was hammered into us from the very first term papers, perhaps even in middle school.

Again, I don’t want to read too much into it, but Domenech is proud that he was home schooled. Perhaps he didn’t get this lesson at home? Whatever the case, it’s clear that he doesn’t get it. His latest defense is that one of his pieces was “inspired” by the original and ran credited as such. Even then, taking the original text and just changing sentences is still plagiarism unless you quote the parts you left alone. That’s not inspiration, that’s recycling a column.

The hatred and angst here is unfortunate, and ultimately not a helpful thing. Just read some of the comments on the various blog posts I’ve linked to… ugh. In the end, however, this guy should’ve resigned as he did earlier today. And, quite frankly, he should’ve apologized right away when he was caught rather than coming up with seemingly absurd defenses for his actions. Didn’t the Republican world have something to say about that with a certain ex-President?

11:49 pm | leave a comment

CNN and WaPo Staff Writer defends WashintonPost.com, explaining that the editor did it. Um, yeah. See, the funny thing about this is that I’m sure that someone will track down the editor at that paper. In the age of the Internet, I’m sure that the masthead is somewhere, even if the paper is now defunct. And when someone tracks down the editor and mentions that a prominent opinion blogger/columnist/former Bush aide accused them of plagiarism…

10:46 am | leave a comment

Kevin Drum highlights another article where yet another former Bush administration official comes forward and criticizes the post war environment in Iraq. If the Democrats get back Congress, expect some dazzling corruption investigations. There looks to be enough going on to make the oil-for-food scandal look small.

2:21 am | leave a comment

I posted earlier about the new “Red America” blog at WashingtonPost.com. The blog is really pretty silly, and I’ve come to the conclusion that it will, in the end, be a pretty unimportant blog. It’s still infuriating that the Post felt that they needed a conservative blog with no ideological equivalent on the left.

However, the story took a weird turn today as numerous folks found evidence of plagiarism in Domenech’s earlier works. Many of these are movie reviews, which apparently are OK to plagiarize if you’re a conservative partisan. Some are from college, others are from his professional writing career (such as it is, writing for uber-partisan NRO, etc.).

I wrote music reviews at Hopkins for the News-Letter for a short while. I realized it wasn’t as important as my academic writing, but even then I approached it with the same set of ethics and integrity. Plagiarism is wrong, period. Wholesale copying of sentences and paragraphs goes beyond paraphrasing or inspiration. It’s clearly laziness and representative of the type of ethical deficiencies that should prevent someone from getting a gig at a place like WashingtonPost.com.

(first instance found via Atrios)

2:08 am | leave a comment

This is pretty funny. Apparently, South Park aired a show, Trapped in the Closet, that made fun of Tom Cruise and Scientology. If you know anything about Scientology, they don’t like being made fun of. It’s a cult, and this one responds aggressively. Rumor has it that Cruise complained and threatened to stop promoting MI:III unless they stopped airing that episode (MI:III is a Paramount film… Paramount is owned by Viacom, which owns Comedy Central — see here). Isaac Hayes, who plays Chef on the show, is also a Scientologist. He quit the show. South Park struck back. Read the article for more.

6:27 pm | leave a comment

Interesting article about labor unrest in France. If you’re used to American “at will” style employment, seeing how France does it provides an interesting contrast.

10:30 pm | leave a comment

Where is the f’ing “Blue America” blog? Do we really need mainstream media institutionalization of partisanship? This is so wrong on so many levels, I can’t even begin to address it. It’s literally making me sputter at my desk. Stupid Washington Post doing even more stupid things. I can’t believe this.

1:21 pm | 1 comment

So, I just saw an advertisement on TV where people are encouraged to be better.  It’s sponsored by www.forbetterlife.org.  Apparently, it is not affiliated with any political groups or religious organizations.  The privately funded, non-profit encourages people to be responsible for their actions. 

6:02 pm | leave a comment

One easy way to do rounded corners entirely in CSS and HTML.

5:19 pm | leave a comment