Friday, January 30, 2015

More Currents

Last week I shared the books that I'm currently reading. Since I'm still feeling out what direction to go in the blog, I though I'd share this week what other media I'm regularly taking in, and a few thoughts on each item. In no particular order:

Wrong About Everything. WAE is a podcast hosted by four Minnesotans- two republicans and two democrats. It's a weekly show that publishes episodes (I listen through a combination of iTunes and Android radio app Stitcher) on Sundays. They discuss national and Minnesota state politics with an excellent and equal blend of liberal and conservative views that manages to stay civil and friendly for about 90% of topics discussed. I've found it to be a great way to take in two sides of a public policy issue or national event and stay plugged in to what's going on at the capitol in St. Paul.

The Daily Show. Most of you who know me offline know that I have followed the Daily Show and the now-defunct Colbert Report for several years. Stewart's contract with Comedy Central ends late this year, but he's been hosting the show since 1999 (Or, when I was eleven). One of the things I"ve come to enjoy most about The Daily Show is the diversity of the people Stewart brings to the show for "Daily Show Correspondents." This was highlighted recently with this clip after the Charlie Hebdo terrorist attack in Paris. I don't endorse or philosophically align with everything that's on the show, but it is consistently a very watchable and funny show, and Stewart's interview skills are very, very good.

The Nightly Show. Former Daily Show "Senior Black Correspondent" Larry Wilmore got a promotion this month after the 11:30-12:00EST time slot opened up with Colbert's departure. The Nightly Show is still working to establish it's identity, which makes it interesting in itself. The third segment of each show is called "Keep it 100," in which Larry asks his panelists a (often absurd, impossible) question, and the guests have to be 100% truthful in their answer. Larry is a likable host, but I question the decision for a guest panel that takes up 2/3 of each episode. Perhaps as he and his staff get better at producing and writing more of their own content, this will go away. Maybe they have a tight leash from Comedy Central since they're a new show, and so they don't have the budget for more research/writing/traveling report expenses. Maybe I'm too used to Stewart and Colbert's one-segment interview format. Either way, it feels a bit like they are using their guests to fill up time that they don't know what to do with. "Keep it 100" is consistently funny, but probably doesn't need it's own segment.


Fracas and Hi Octane. After stumbling across this link a month ago, I've been on a bit of an old computer game kick. I downloaded Boxer, an MS-DOS emulator for Mac, and have been playing these games a couple times a week. In Fracas, basically you're a little wizard and you run around blowing up rocks to get gems and potions to kill the little blue and green monsters that try and run over you. Hi Octane is a game originally for Playstation. It's pretty much just a fast paced shoot-'em'up racing game. I'm not much of a video game player now, and never really have been, so when I do play something, I like simple stuff.

That's it for this week. Thanks for reading!

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Currently Reading

Thanks to my friend Levi Avery for a short blog post inspiring me to (attempt to) jump back on board the blogger bus in 2015. Blogging more was one of my goals that I laid out for myself towards the end of 2014, so now that we're 2/3 of the way through January, I suppose it's time to get started.

Still need to do a bit of focused thinking on format, subject matter and length of posts that I'll utilize, but for today I'll take a cue from Levi and share what I'm currently reading.

(All photos in this post supplied by Google Images). I got Every Good Endeavor for my birthday last June, but being as I was pretty focused on my grad school program at the time, I didn't even think about starting it. December brought graduation, and January brought a promotion, so I figured the new year was a great time to jump in. Very good book so far. This is my first Keller read, and now I understand why so many Christians are so enthused about his work. It's accessible, relevant and very thoughtful work. Well recommended.

I'm also wading through:
This one I picked up at the now-closed Barnes and Noble in downtown Rochester last fall. It just kinda caught my eye from the shelf, and I had a gift card worth roughly the purchase price, so that worked out well. It's my first Caro read, and wow, it is dense and incredibly thorough. One of the things I enjoy most about historical biographies is how much perspective it gives on current events. Robert Moses was New York City's master planner for a good chunk of 40 years, and had a tremendous impact on the way it looks and lives today. At 1,160 pages, the book will consume most of the calendar year I suspect, but so far it's been an exceptionally rich biography with pluperfect research. It's even expanding my lexicon, teaching me words like pluperfect.

Thanks for reading!