Monthly Archives: November 2010

Give This Guy a TV Show

Alan Grayson is a master at making a point. See for example today's effort, What Republicans Can Do With Their Tax Cuts For The Rich:

The man is not subtle, but he is effective. Given that the voters of his Florida district have replaced him with a dangerously crazy person, Grayson needs a new gig. [Update: as commentator “Mike” points out, I've mixed up my Republicans. Grayson was defeated by the somewhat less crazy Daniel Webster — he's one of the no-abortion-even-cases-of-rape-or-incest 'family values' candidates.]

Someone get him a TV show! (Or maybe talk radio?)

Posted in Politics: US | 3 Comments

A Behanding in Spokane

Dennis Creaghan gives a real performance in Martin McDonagh's confection of a noire play, A Behanding in Spokane. (Yes, “Behanding”.) When Creaghan is on stage, he dominates it. And why shouldn't he – his Carmichael has the gun, he has the lines, he has the presence, even if he doesn't have a hand.

Normally I'd tell you a bit about the story and how this disparate crew happened to end up in a seedy hotel room, but I think that would spoil the experience.

And you might want to have the experience: The GablesStage does this slightly underweight script proud. Set designer Lyle Baskin's hotel room is straight out of the pulps, and perfect for the story. The three other characters mostly exist to play off Creaghan's Irish-American Ahab, and they do it well. Mervyn the bellhop (Erik Fabregat) gets a soliloquy and some nice to-and-fro with the other characters, until the script lets him down a bit at the end. The poor actors who have to play the young couple who ensnare themselves in Carmichael's one-handed madness pretty much do the best they can with what they're given, but Marckenson Charles, who plays Toby, seemed to fade in and out of his misfortunate character while Jackie Rivera's Marilyn was a little one-noteish. It doesn't matter.

Is this the greatest play of the year? No. It's not in the same class as some of GableStage's recent plays, such as Speed-the-Plow, the play that convinced us to become subscribers. But A Behanding in Spokane is a fun 90-minute-without-intermission romp, and even if the ending is a little too pat for my taste, it's worth seeing if you like the theater.

Adult tickets run from $35-$42 depending on what night and whether you qualify for a senior citizen discount. The Friday I attended there were plenty of empty seats in the small theater, and it looked as if most attendees had gotten that discount. That's a shame. The GablesStage is a local treasure, and director Joseph Adler has good, if sometimes slightly strange, taste and guts.

Student tickets are only $15, people, and the theater, located in the Biltmore, is just up the street. Go for it. (Note: the show ends this weekend; I wrote this review just after seeing the play a couple of weeks ago, then emailed the theater asking for a still to illustrate the review. They never replied. Oh well.)

Posted in Kultcha | Comments Off on A Behanding in Spokane

It Was Just a Fad

Hand sanitizer only last for two minutes, not effective at killing germs long-term

And we have these things up all over the campus.

Posted in Science/Medicine | 5 Comments

Thinking Out of the Box on How to Fix the Deficit

Fred Clark has a really neat idea about how to Fix the deficit. Implementation is a bit tricky, but it has all sorts of good properties if one could pull it off.

For background, consider Kevin Drum's pithy observation that — unless we go down the road of giving rich people more tax cuts at the expense of poor people's kids — everything you really need to know about the deficit is captured in one chart on p.4 of this testimony by the Congressional Budget Office.

Posted in Econ & Money | 10 Comments

Never Say the Tea Party Inspires or is Connected to Violence

Chickens Home to Roost?.

I'd say more, but it's wall-to-wall meetings today.

Posted in Politics: Tinfoil | 3 Comments

ASIL is Here

Blenderlaw reminds me that:

The American Society of International Law is meeting in Miami this week (the program is here and the UM announcement is here).

This serves as the kick-off to the happy part of the year in which all sorts of great things happen in Miami (and at the law school) because the weather is so good.

Posted in Law: International Law | Comments Off on ASIL is Here