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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

I’m a pretty big Donovan McNabb fan. I’m not one of those Eagles fans who wants to run him out of town at the first sign of struggle. So, understand that when I say that McNabb is the reason the Eagles look so awful tonight, I don’t say it with malice or with a predisposition for picking on McNabb.

Couple of observations from tonight’s game (and from the first two, as well — I missed most of last week’s game).

  1. His timing is off, he’s throwing late and holding the ball too long.
  2. Yes, the receivers aren’t getting open as much as they need to against press coverage.
  3. That being said, McNabb isn’t scanning the field like he used to. Too often, he’s only looking right (the natural side for a righty) and isn’t looking left. That’s a rookie mistake. Follow your progressions, Donovan. This is the biggest issue tonight, I’ve seen Curtis, Buckhalter, and others open left during a lot of the sacks.
  4. Accuracy is down. He does throw a few into the turf every other game or so, but this year he’s been missing right, high, and behind receivers. This is uncharacteristic.
  5. McNabb looks to be slow on his scrambles. Probably due to the injury, but he needs to adjust to that fact, then.

This is a quick list, but item 3 is by and far the most frustrating thing to me. When I’m watching QBs for my fantasy team (stop snickering!), that’s one thing I look for. His head should hit both sides on many if not most of the pass plays. A QB that only looks one way cuts off half his receivers. This also leads to a lot of interceptions.

The easiest way to see if I’m right or wrong will be to see the breakdown of passes by zone. I bet there has only been 1 or 2 attempts to the left side of the field. Pick any other game from last year and I bet that’s not true. (I’ll look this up tomorrow).

11 sacks (and counting) have to more with McNabb’s performance rather than the injuries hurting the team. I’m not saying Winston Justice isn’t making mistakes, or that Brian Westbrook isn’t a big loss. What I’m saying is that McNabb has done better with less. The Giants are good, but they’re not this good.

The good thing is that this stuff can be fixed, especially over a two week break (well, except for the speed issue). McNabb shouldn’t be immune from criticism, and it shouldn’t be we love you or leave town. Let’s go Eagles, this season isn’t over yet. McNabb does his part, the rest of the team does their’s and the playoffs are still in reach.

11:07 pm | 3 comments

The top brackets look to benefit the most from a regular inflation adjustment. I know, surprising…

9:15 pm | leave a comment

I would actually like to see this, in part because it helps the Dems, but also because it frees the Republicans from their Constitution-hating theocracy-wishing part of their base. It makes the debate clearer as well, since it takes the economically liberal but socially conservative folks out of the Republicans and allows the Republicans to shift back to their libertarian-lite, big corporate stances. I don’t want Giuliani to get the Republican nomination, because I hope for some sanity on the R side of the world, but quite frankly, if Dobson and co pulled this trick in response, we’d have a Dem president and a real shakeup in how the parties line up.

4:51 pm | leave a comment

But, but, but, the phone companies told me that Net Neutrality was unnecessary! Would they be that dishonest?

3:20 pm | leave a comment

if you’re interested in FISA details, good stuff here.

2:47 pm | leave a comment

Oh, look, pandering. And is anyone considering voting for John McCain still? (Hint: you really don’t want to answer yes…)

4:51 pm | leave a comment

The 30 second version flows better as a commercial, but there’s too much visually cool about the longer one to skip it. The music is Regina Spektor, Musicbox according to multiple sources online.

2:20 pm | 2 comments

Interesting angle. This is one piece of legislation I wrote Dodd and Lieberman about. For the technical reasons in the article, the software engineer in me thinks this is bad policy, but more than that it’s short sighted. This bill has other, non-security policy targets, and we should be honest about that, too.

2:04 pm | leave a comment

Yay! Media fails to do basic truth reporting again!

12:59 pm | leave a comment

2 days before Ari Fleischer told the press and the American people that Bush wasn’t sure whether inspections had reached a dead end, he said to President Aznar, “No matter what happens, we’ll be in Baghdad by the end of March.” Hadn’t made up his mind, my ass.

1:23 am | leave a comment

NYC 17 asked an important question in the comments of the voting laws post, so I feel somewhat compelled to clarify a few things.

I would never and have never considered members of the Republican party to be “bad” people. I used to be one. So, when I say something like “Republican abuses” I am talking about the leadership of the party, though I might be talking about the national, state, or local organizations.

That being said, I also mentioned that Republicans that follow the national playbook on electoral politics and strategy are complicit in the lies and abuse. When your leadership lies to raise funds, and you use the funds to win your local elections, you’re part of the problem. Leadership means standing up to people who perpetually lie to boost your chances at the poll.

There’s an interesting debate on why the Democrats can’t compete with Republicans on messaging. Here’s the money quote from Duncan Black (aka Atrios):

… it just seems like the Democrats really don’t know how to work the media on these issues. It is true SCHIP has the advantage of being easy - “Bush does’t want kids to have health care” - and the Democrats have been better at their media push than usual.

I get the sense that Democrats craft these things behind closed doors, try to come up with palatable bipartisan agreements, and then show up on the teevee the day of the vote and announce that they passed it. That’s wonderful, if it’s a good bill which actually passes and gets a veto override if necessary. What isn’t wonderful is if they do all that and it doesn’t get enacted into law.

The Republican version would’ve been to spend 6 months telling people that kids are GOING TO DIE RIGHT NOW UNLESS THIS BILL PASSES and beating the Democrats into submission. That isn’t how our team works. Which is fine, if it achieves something. Not fine if it doesn’t.

He’s absolutely right, and the depressing thing is that while I want the Democrats to win, I don’t really like the idea of blowing every issue out of proportion in order to get the public to support you. It’s insanely dishonest, and it’s why we have such polarized politics.

Republicans are always going around warning of how Democrats are out to get you. It’s the party of scaring people. If Democrats pass changes to the Patriot Act, or bring the NSA and CIA back into FISA compliance, terrorists will attack you in your home tomorrow. If the Democrats want to bring troops home, they aren’t supporting the troops. If they criticize a general whose activity is entirely political, they scream about how Democrats don’t support the troops. Every potential vote or resolution that might be politically inconvenient for Republicans WILL KILL YOU.

Or, make you gay. Or destroy your family. You get the idea.

Stand up, sensible Republicans. You must exist, but you’re happy to be silent when your team is winning. That’s pathetic.

PS. One clarification on my politics moratorium. It’s not that I won’t post links to political topics or stories, but that I’m not going to do long form original commentary like this. I just get worked up and it’s not really good for my concentration or general sanity. This country is in trouble, and it stands at the feet of the Republicans who lie to win, consequences be damned, and Democrats who can’t figure out how to win even when the truth is on their side. At least one side is trying to be honorable, but it seems in this day and age that’s simply not enough.

So, commentary like this is generally out. Besides, as I said before, I don’t think my thoughts are original, so go read the smarter folks out there. :)

Update: Gosh, I forgot the most obvious example of lying imaginable, President Bush’s claims in 2003 that he hadn’t made up his mind to go to war. It was garbage then, as the transcripts of his conversation with Aznar show. It’s been reported in books and newspapers before, but it doesn’t matter. He lied. No Republican will criticize this and no media outlet will make a big stink about it. Indeed, media organizations like CBS, The Times, and others have actively suppressed stories critical of the administration. There’s something to be said for over-consolidation in the news media, but honest Republicans can also stand up and speak truthfully about these things.

1:03 am | leave a comment

Sense prevails! I can’t believe it.

5:09 pm | leave a comment

Wish I had a few million sitting around. :)

12:26 pm | leave a comment

Glad I’m not planning on selling my house this year…

11:22 am | 1 comment

Talking about the refuge crisis in Iraq.

11:08 am | leave a comment