editorialnoisecollage

extraordinarily miscellaneous

Friday, November 20, 2009

And we're back..

...after a long hiatus, I'm back to blogging on ENC. This is mostly due to the fact that I recently became unemployed, but I began a whole other blog to deal with that.

We'll stick to politics, editorializing the editorialists, rock music, theater, thoughts on the "role of the artist in society", and a random smattering of other cultural events.

Word.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Ch-Ch-Change We Can Believe In



Get your limited edition Chia Obama here.

Full Court Press

Lately The Politico is not one of my favorite political websites. In the last few months since the election its taken a sharp right turn. But Mike Allen has a really interesting behind the scenes look today at the planning that goes in to preparing questions for presidential press conferences.

Give it a read. A morsel:

The president’s answers were notably long at his last press conference. Although reporters have been told to expect crisper ones this time, Henry pointed out that the long ones can be smart strategy.

“He can get his message out by hitting five or six points instead of just one or two,” Henry said. “But also, the longer the answer, the more people kind of forget the question, and it can take the sting off. At that first news conference, there were some answers where I was thinking, ‘What did that guy ask again?’”

44 Turns Up The Volume On His Megaphone

If you need yet more dramatic proof that our new president is the antithesis of our old president, check out this op-ed by 44 published in 30 newspapers around the world today.

Where Dubya was stubborn, myopic, and unable to understand how multilateral cooperation on issues of global concern was beneficial, Obama is a true statesman, talking directly to the citizens of the world about how the global economic crisis cannot be fixed by one nation's solutions. In advance of the meeting of the Group of 20 this week, he insists that they must "embrace a common framework" to stop the global decline.

Although I laud the president's efforts here, one can't help but wonder if his concern over China's talk of replacing the dollar as the global reserve currency had something to do with penning the piece.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Raising Cane

An interesting piece from the NY Times about sugar's revival, and how it has nothing to with nutritional value.

Pat Crawford of the Center for Weight and Health at the University of California, Berkeley, remembers when sugar was such a loaded word that cereal makers changed the name of products like Sugar Pops to Corn Pops.

Even though overall consumption of caloric sweeteners is starting to drop, Dr. Crawford says an empty calorie is still an empty calorie. And it does not matter whether people think sugar is somehow “retro,” a word used to promote new, sugar-based versions of Pepsi and Mountain Dew called Throwback.

“If people really want to go back to where we were, that means not putting sugar in everything,” she said. “It means keeping it to desserts.”



Amen