Monday, January 31, 2022

Featured Links - January 31, 2022

Links to things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about. For those interested, the picture below shows birds wintering on Frenchman's Bay. It took it with my old Fuji HS-10, which has a small sensor by current standards, but a great zoom range.



Thursday, January 27, 2022

Evelyn Gunn, RIP

Evelyn Gunn, Nancy's mother and my much-loved mother-in law, has died at the age of 84. Her funeral will he held on Saturday. Her obituary and other details are here.

Monday, January 24, 2022

Blog Hiatus Until End of January

I'm going to take a break from blogging until the end of January, due to a death in the family. I should be back at the beginning of February. 

Sunday, January 23, 2022

Featured Links - January 23, 2022

Links to things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about.



Photo of the Week - January 23, 2022

The sunset on the day of our massive snowstorm was almost worth dealing with all of the snow (about 50 cm). 

Fujifilm X-S10 with 16-80 mm. F4 at 31 mm., F4.5, 1/120 second, ISO 160, Kodachrome 64 film simulation 


Saturday, January 22, 2022

Saturday Sounds - Broken Social Scene - Old Dead Young

Broken Social Scene are probably the best band to come out of Toronto since the turn of the century. I first encountered their music when their album, You Forgot It in People, started getting a lot of airplay. It instantly became one of my favourite albums. In 2004, I took my 10-year-old daughter to see them at a free concert in Harbourfront and we've seen them twice since. For Christmas this year, she got us tickets to see them at Massey Hall in April, and I'm hoping that this damned pandemic doesn't get in the way. 

They've just released a new album called Old Dead Young which is a collection of B-sides and rarities. Pitchfork has this to say about the album in their review.

Old Dead Young, the band’s new career-spanning B-sides and rarities collection, won’t necessarily give you the same ecstatic lift of their more beloved material. For the most part, these 14 tracks are a pretty subdued listen. They’re not the band’s best songs, and most of the record isn’t particularly memorable. Old Dead Young is best appreciated as the first retrospective from a band whose music is already all about self-mythologizing and looking back at the past.

If you're new to the band, you might want to listen to You Forgot It In People first before diving into this collection. If you can find it, check out This Movie is Broken, which was partly filmed at their 2009 Harbourfront concert, the best concert I've been to in this millennium. 

Friday, January 21, 2022

Active Watching for Prostate Cancer Works, For Some

It used to be the case that a diagnosis of prostate cancer meant surgery with the likelihood of unpleasant complications along with radiation or chemotherapy treatments. While some types of aggressive cancer do require surgery, many cases of prostate cancer now involve "active surveillance", which involves regular PSA tests and biopsies. 

Statnews has an interesting article that describes the new trend in treatment. I found it especially interesting that the article mentions Dr. Lawrence Klotz, who works out of Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto, and has operated on a family member. 

The second urologist shared with me the results of research by Laurence Klotz, a pioneering Canadian urologist, showing that virtually all men like me with low-risk prostate cancer were alive 10 years after undergoing radical prostate removal surgery, after undergoing radiation treatment to kill cancer cells, or after following active surveillance, a strategy in which the cancer is closely monitored and treatment begun only if the cancer became aggressive. The second doctor assured me there would be plenty of time to intervene with surgery or radiation should that happen.

The article is also another example of why it pays to get a second opinion when major medical interventions are involved. 

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

You Can Have Too Many Books

Some people, like me for example, have too many books. I have a few hundred hardcovers and paperbacks, mostly science fiction and fantasy, living on a large bookshelf in my office next to my computer desk. For me, it's too many as I will never read most of them again, and now they are just clutter, though some of them are not worthless. 

However, I'm nowhere near being in the league of this lady in Cornwall, Ontario. She has about 200, 000 books.

Standing amidst her towering piles of books, with barely enough room to move between them, Myriam Gaudet clings to the belief that each one will find a new home.

Gaudet, who owns Red Cart Books in Cornwall, Ont., now has a barn and two other farmhouses on the same property full of donated hardcovers, paperbacks and coffee table books, spanning every genre imaginable.

"If I don't take them, they go to the landfill. So I take them," she said.

"I just wish we could hang onto them long enough until the right person comes looking for them, because eventually — pretty much every book — someone will come looking for it."

It's too bad she doesn't have the staff to catalog them. 


Monday, January 17, 2022

Featured LInks - January 17, 2022

Links to things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about.



 

Sunday, January 16, 2022

Photo of the Week - January 16, 2022

Here's a quick grab shot of the moon hanging over the Christmas lights at the front of our house, taken with my Pixel 4a.  




Friday, January 14, 2022

Saturday Sounds - Johnny Cash Live at the Carousel Ballroom, Apirl 24, 1968

Here's a treat for any Johnny Cash fans out there. Check out this 1968 performance by Cash, recorded by the Grateful Dead's incomparable soundman, Owsley Stanley (aka Bear).  

Relix Magazine recently published an article giving more details on the release, which is part of the series, Bear's Sonic Journals. 

That this artifact is so exquisite, both for the performance and its pristine sound quality, is a gift. Cash was a master storyteller, and he told his tales no differently to the Carousel audience than he did the Folsom inmates—the connection he makes with the young urban audience is swift and very real, and it becomes apparent quickly that he’s getting something back from them too. 

 

Thursday, January 13, 2022

How European Royals Once Shared Their Most Important Secrets

A few centuries ago, people used wax seals to secure their letters. This was probably good enough for most people, but seals can be removed and reattached. However, there was a more secure technique called letterlocking that guaranteed that a letter couldn't be opened without it being obvious.

This article from the New York Times describes the technique and its use by royals such as Mary, Queen of Scotts. It's quite fascinating. Watch the video linked in the article which should give you an idea of just how difficult it was to lock a letter using this technique.  

To safeguard the most important royal correspondence against snoops and spies in the 16th century, writers employed a complicated means of security. They’d fold the letter, then cut a dangling strip, using that as an improvised thread to sew stitches that locked the letter and turned the flat writing paper into its own envelope. To get inside, a spy would have to snip the lock open, an act impossible to go undetected.

Catherine de’ Medici used the method in 1570 — a time she governed France while her ill son, King Charles IX, sat on its throne. Queen Elizabeth did so in 1573 as the sovereign ruler of England and Ireland. And Mary Queen of Scots used it in 1587 just hours before her long effort to unite Britain ended in her beheading.

“These people knew more than one way to send a letter and they chose this one,” said Jana Dambrogio, lead author of a study that details Renaissance-era politicians’ use of the technique, and a conservator at the M.I.T. Libraries. “You had to be highly confident to make a spiral lock. If you made a mistake, you’d have to start all over, which could take hours of rewriting and restitching. It’s fascinating. They took great pains to build up their security.”

Wednesday, January 12, 2022

A Farewell to the Vic

Sadly, the Vic has been gone for more than 30 years, but the memories are still there. This is a wonderful article by Bob Burt, who was for a time a reporter at the Sault Star. The Vic really was a special place and I treasure the memories of the times I spent there, mostly with my dad, who was a regular there. 



It just got posted to The Vic Facebook group. I'm taking the liberty of copying it here, with thanks to Bob Burt who perfectly captured the spirit of the Vic. 

LAST CALL: A FAREWELL TO THE VIC AND GOOD TIMES  

THE TORONTO STAR - SUNDAY EDITION

SEPTEMBER 3, 1989

BY BOB BURT 

They sold beer at the Vic. There was no charge for the memories.

Now the Vic has been sold and the lights will flicker in a final Last Call on Sept. 29.

For everyone in or from Sault Ste Marie who has ever lifted a glass there and for everyone else who has lost a favourite "local", a place where everyone knew your name, I propose a toast, a tribute.

Sheer emotion.  This flood's for you.

The Victoria Hotel.  The House of Chow.  The Vic.  One of those places where what it meant was much more important than what it was.

It was a hotel. that's all;  a two-storey, grey, kind of dilapidated.

Since 1920 it has leaned against a corner in the Sault's east end. It had a few rooms upstairs where people could stay.  I think some did.

But mostly it was a beer parlour.  That's what I remember;  pickled eggs, no wine, no hard stuff.  Beer only, bottles or Doran's on tap.  Bottles were 40 cents, draught was a dime.  One bottle or two draughts per customer allowed on the table.  No carrying your beer to another table.  A waiter had to do that.  Separate entrances.  

Men's side, brightly lit, tile floor, plain wood-panelled walls, wooden-backed chairs and orangey-red arborite-topped tables;  no air conditioning, just long-stemmed floor fans that stood in the corners and pushed beer fumes, tobacco smoke and table talk around the room.

THE BROTHERS WERE SINCERE -- THEY KNEW YOUR NAME

Ladies and Escorts side;  more intimate, more discreetly lit, red and jade green colour scheme;  wallpaper, paintings, mirrors on the walls;  the same wooden-backed chairs and arborite tables, but they seemed classier than the ones on the men's side.

The owners were the Chow brothers:  John, Joe, King, Jimmy and Albert.  They took it over when their father Charlie died in 1951.  Dressed neatly, almost formally - with the exception of John - in short red jackets, white shirts, black tie, black pants, socks and shoes.

John wore suits, usually three-piece, in grey or beige.  He was the corporate point man, the Chamber of Commerce and Kiwanis Club rep.  While Joe, Jimmy and Albert waited the tables and King worked the taps, John worked the crowd, strolling among the regulars, sitting at their tables, inquiring after their families and jobs, buying the odd round.

Funny thing was, his interest was sincere.  His brothers were the same.

After you went there two or three times they all knew your name and what you drank.

It always amazed first-timers that they never accepted tips.

And they took care of us.  One night Joe handed me a wadded-up piece of corrugated white paper wrapper - the kind the picked eggs came in.

"You  forgot this last time," he said.  In the wrapper were $9 in bills and some silver - change from $10 I had left sitting on a table when I had walked out a week earlier.

They looked after us in other ways too.  Sensibilities were different then and designated drivers were unheard of;  most of us looked upon drinking and driving as standard operating procedure.  But there were nights when one of the Chow brothers would take the car keys away from someone who had been too long at the table and hand them to a freshly-arrived friend, warning him to be the chauffeur.  Or a Chow would simply take the keys, hide them and call a taxi.  You could pick up your keys, sheepishly, the next day.

The Vic was a haven, a safe harbour.  The kind of place everyone needs and the kind that when it disappears, it hurts like hell.  That's what it meant.  It was comfortable and familiar.  You could go there anytime, without calling ahead, knowing that some of your friends would be there.

Local baseball, basketball and hockey teams gathered there after games;  teachers unwound there on Friday afternoons;  on any given night, salesmen, steelworkers, architects, off-duty cops, journalists, lawyers, labourers and local politicians gathered to talk, drink and watch whichever game was on TV.

Hundreds of romances began there, as many affairs, and I suppose, divorces.  It was a starting point for ski weekends and beach parties; a stop-off after a movie; a launching pad for trips to Toronto,  Detroit, Chicago or Green Bay; a departure point to forays across the river to the late-closing bars and sometimes, the red-light houses in the Michigan Sault.

Before bank cards and bank machines, you could cash a personal cheque there, or if the till was thin, King would pull out $20 or $50 out of his wallet and tell you to repay him the next time you came in.  I don't think anybody ever stiffed him.

It was a place where brides and grooms dropped in between church and reception to hoist a glass to the Chows and the Vic for bringing them together.  And it is said, perhaps apocryphally, that it was a place where brides occasionally stormed in to grab grooms who had stopped off on the way to church.

FAMILY DEMANDS ENDED TRADITIONAL CHRISTMAS EVE VISIT

On Christmas Eve afternoon, friends gathered and stayed until the 6 PM closing.  For the regulars and familiar faces, the Chows had small presents - coffee mugs, keychains, plastic change purses that you squeezed open, all with the House of Chow logo.

Family demands and changing responsibilities ended that tradition for my generation.  The last Christmas Eve I dropped in, several years ago, the place was packed but the Chows were the only people I knew.

The brothers grew older too.  Albert, 82, is in a wheelchair after a stroke in the early '70s - John is 75, King 70, Jimmy 67 and Joe 64.  Their children had different interests and went into different professions.  It was jarring after a several-year absence to go in and see new waiters - and waitresses - who were young, Caucasian and who accepted tips.

When I first started going there - about two years before I legally should have - it was 1960 - and only the brothers worked there.

They closed at 6:30 and re-opened at 8 every night.  That was the law.  The theory was that you would go home for supper.  But serious drinkers would go to a Johnny-come-lately cocktail lounge that didn't have to close because along with a drink, they'd serve a meal - usually a very tired cheese sandwich that no one ever ate.

The Vic was a place of happy hours - real ones, not just marketing strategies - cold beer and warm memories.

A summer night when I picked my dad up after his shift at the steel plant, I suggested for the first time that we go for a beer.  I had turned 21, the age of majority then, while I was away at university.  Dad knew I drank the odd beer but thought that I confined it to rec rooms and fishing camps.  When we entered the Vic, 4 of the 5 Chow brothers greeted me by name and the 5th, Jimmy, placed a bottle of "my" brand on the table as we sat down,  then asked dad what he'd like.

He ordered a draught, then silently studied me until it arrived.  He shook his head.

"Not only do they know your name, they know which brand you drink," he said, voice tight.  Then he started to laugh.  "I don't think I'll tell your mother about this part," he said.

We laughed, sipped and talked for about an hour.  The conversation was no different from the hundred others we had had, but we had passed some kind of threshold.  It was the first time I thought of the two of us - together - as men.  I'd found a friend.

A night when an old friend, a reporter for the Sault Star, sat at my table and asked what I was up to.  I told him I had dropped out of university and was working at the steel plant while I figured out my next move.

He remembered that I liked to write and said that a reporter had just left the paper.

If I wanted to go in for an interview, he said he'd put in a word for me.  I was hesitant but he spent the next hour enthusiastically talking up journalism.  I went for an interview. Three weeks later I was a reporter.  I'd found a career.

A night months later, after an evening reporting job, when the same guy who led me into journalism, led me into the Vic.  (Actually this happened more than once.)

We checked out the women's side - that was what you did back then - and saw one of his girlfriends with another young woman whom I knew casually.  A few years earlier, she had worked after school at a drugstore in our neighbourhood and had sold me the perfume and candy I had lavished on a succession of high school sweethearts, as I tried, more or less vainly in those pre-pill days, to buy my way into their hearts and other body parts.

The other reporter and I joined the women and chatted until he and his girlfriend decided to go to a nightclub.  The ex-drugstore clerk and I didn't feel like partying and since she lived a few blocks from my place, I offered her a ride home.

A few days later I asked her out.  The Chow brothers jokingly kept after me to drop her.  She drank only pop.

But I didn't.  Because I discovered in endless conversations - many at the Vic -  that she was intelligent, articulate, funny, outspoken and had a passionate commitment to fairness and justice.  That she was good-looking and had a terrific body  didn't hurt either.

When the penny finally dropped, I was on the East coast, so I had to call her to ask the question.  Otherwise I probably would have proposed at the Vic too.  I'd found a wife.

We celebrated our 19th anniversary last month.

AS YEARS PASSED THE VIC EXPANDED TO SUIT THE TIMES

Times change,  The liquor laws have loosened..  The Vic didn't have to close for supper anymore and it could stay open as long as the cocktail lounges.  The Chows started serving wine and mixed drinks.  They added an extension to what had been the women's side.  For a while they served a great Chinese luncheon.

For their older customers they built a second addition where you could drink and talk quietly without being overwhelmed by the music.  But that room was plush and had soft chairs and once I think I saw someone buy a drink with a little umbrella in it.  I guess the Chow brothers were the only constant.  And that was enough.

It was almost 20 years since I'd lived in the Sault, almost 30 years since I'd first sat at a table in the Vic.  

I walked in and before I could order, Joe snapped open a bottle and brought it over, partially hiding it beside his body.  Recalling the brand I'd drunk when he first served me all those years before, he said:  "Export, eh, Bob?" Then he whipped the bottle onto the table.

It was a Blue.  The brand I'd drunk the last time I'd been there, a few years earlier.

He was grinning.  

"I remember," he said.

So do I, Joe.  So do I.


Tuesday, January 11, 2022

The Best Free Video Editing Software

Although I've been a photographer for most of my adult life, I've never done much video recording. Back when my kids were young, we bought a Hi8 video camera and I have a few VHS cassettes that we transferred to that format and later to DVD. But since then, I've done very little, despite having excellent video capability on my phone and current camera.

So I don't want to spend money on video editing software that I'm not going to use very often. Fortunately, there are some good and free video editing tools out there, as this article from Creative Blog points out. I've not used any of the packages that they review, but I will be bookmarking the article just in case I have the need. 

The two top packages in their list are Lightworks and KineMaster. 

Monday, January 10, 2022

Featured Links - January 10, 2022

Links to things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about.

Ice on Frenchman's Bay, taken with my Pixel 4a

Sunday, January 09, 2022

Photo of the Week - January 9, 2022

Here's another picture of swans on Frenchman's Bay. Later in the winter, there will be thousands of birds out on the bay. 

Fujifilm X-S10 with 16-80 mm. F4 at 16 mm., F11, 1/3200 second, ISO 1600, Trix-X 400 film simulation



Saturday, January 08, 2022

Saturday Sounds - Count Basie and His Orchestra, North Sea Jazz Festival 1979

Today's post came out of a post on Facebook featuring selections from the Brantford International Jazz Festival (the Brantford west of Toronto, not the one in the UK) which included the Count Basie Orchestra. I mentioned that I had see him in the 1970s and got a surprised comment from a friend. 

The concert I saw was part of the Belvedere King Size Jazz Festival, which was held at Varsity Stadium in Toronto in July 1974. I remember it still quite vividly. It included performances by Moe Koffman, Maynard Ferguson, Peter Appleyard, Louis Bellson, Woody Herman, Dizzy Gillespie, and Count Basie and His Orchestra, among others. It was a hot weekend of hot jazz. 

As for Count Basie, I wasn't particularly a fan before the concert, but I left a fan. His orchestra was amazing; they had the smoothest sound I have ever heard from a big band. 

Here's a performance recorded at the North Sea Jazz Festival on July 14, 1979. 

The second concert of bandleader/pianist William ‘Count’ Basie and his Count Basie Orchestra at the North Sea Jazz Festival 1979 features great solos by bassist John Clayton and drummer Butch Miles."

Basie did two concerts at the festival, one month before his 75th birthday.

This is the second concert with some great solos by John Clayton, Butch Miles, Freddie Green, Sonny Cohn and Danny Turner.

Enjoy. 





Friday, January 07, 2022

Yes, Look Up

We watched Don't Look Up on Netflix last night. The movie has gotten a lot of buzz since its release in December and deservedly so. It's a biting satire, which if some of the reviews are any indication, left some reviewers bleeding. It's not subtle, and it's very funny, but it's the type of humour that can make you wince. I liked it a lot.

Although the disaster in the movie is a comet impact, the response to the news is clearly an allegory about our current climate disaster. In The Guardian, Peter Kalmus, a climate scientist and author of Being the Change: Live Well and Spark a Climate Revolution, explores this in more detail.

The Earth system is breaking down now with breathtaking speed. And climate scientists have faced an even more insurmountable public communication task than the astronomers in Don’t Look Up, since climate destruction unfolds over decades – lightning fast as far as the planet is concerned, but glacially slow as far as the news cycle is concerned – and isn’t as immediate and visible as a comet in the sky.

Given all this, dismissing Don’t Look Up as too obvious might say more about the critic than the film. It’s funny and terrifying because it conveys a certain cold truth that climate scientists and others who understand the full depth of the climate emergency are living every day. I hope that this movie, which comically depicts how hard it is to break through prevailing norms, actually helps break through those norms in real life.


Thursday, January 06, 2022

Old Book Illustrations

If you're a fan of old books (pre-20th century), you'll likely enjoy Old Book Illustrations, which is an extensive gallery of book illustrations from the French Romantic and Victorian eras. You can browse the site by subject, title, and author or search via several criteria. The site provides extensive information for each illustration.

Here's an illustration of the Great Comet of 1881 by Étienne Léopold Trouvelot. 

All images should be in the public domain.

  

Tuesday, January 04, 2022

The Troubled Future of the United States

I've been following with more than a little disquiet, the political scene in the United States. Well before the 2020 election, I thought that it might not be held or would result in full-scale political breakdown. I was only partially right. I'm not so hopeful about 2024. 

There's a new book, published today, by Stephen Marche, called The Next Civil War: Dispatches from the American Future. This is from the book's description on Amazon.

On a small two-lane bridge in a rural county that loathes the federal government, the US Army uses lethal force to end a standoff with hard-right anti-government patriots. Inside an ordinary diner, a disaffected young man with a handgun takes aim at the American president stepping in for an impromptu photo-op, and a bullet splits the hyper-partisan country into violently opposed mourners and revelers. In New York City, a Category 2 hurricane plunges entire neighborhoods underwater and creates millions of refugees overnight—a blow that comes on the heels of a financial crash and years of catastrophic droughts— and tips America over the edge into ruin.

These nightmarish scenarios are just three of the five possibilities most likely to spark devastating chaos in the United States that are brought to life in The Next Civil War, a chilling and deeply researched work of speculative nonfiction. Drawing upon sophisticated predictive models and nearly two hundred interviews with experts—civil war scholars, military leaders, law enforcement officials, secret service agents, agricultural specialists, environmentalists, war historians, and political scientists—journalist Stephen Marche predicts the terrifying future collapse that so many of us do not want to see unfolding in front of our eyes. Marche has spoken with soldiers and counterinsurgency experts about what it would take to control the population of the United States, and the battle plans for the next civil war have already been drawn up. Not by novelists, but by colonels.

The Guardian has just published an article by the author, warning that the political situation in the US is dire. 

Two things are happening at the same time. Most of the American right have abandoned faith in government as such. Their politics is, increasingly, the politics of the gun. The American left is slower on the uptake, but they are starting to figure out that the system which they give the name of democracy is less deserving of the name every year.

An incipient illegitimacy crisis is under way, whoever is elected in 2022, or in 2024. According to a University of Virginia analysis of census projections, by 2040, 30% of the population will control 68% of the Senate. Eight states will contain half the population. The Senate malapportionment gives advantages overwhelmingly to white, non– college educated voters. In the near future, a Democratic candidate could win the popular vote by many millions of votes and still lose. Do the math: the federal system no longer represents the will of the American people.

If you thought the last few years were wild, just wait. I have very little hope that the US will avoid either a civil war or a turn into full authoritarianism (see Hungary). 

If you want to dive into more articles that will keep you up at night, read The Guardian's section on the far right. For example:

  • Extremist groups continue to ‘metastasize and recruit’ after Capitol attack, study finds. "The report says that while some groups were gripped with paranoia by the arrests, others began targeting local politics."
  • US could be under rightwing dictator by 2030, Canadian professor warns. "Canadian political scientist warns in op ed of Trumpist threat to American democracy and possible effect on northern neighbor."
  • America is now in fascism’s legal phase. "The history of racism in the US is fertile ground for fascism. Attacks on the courts, education, the right to vote and women’s rights are further steps on the path to toppling democracy."
  •  

     

     

    The Greatest Movie Scores of All Time

    If you enjoy movie scores, you should find this list interesting. It concentrates mostly on classic films; I think the most recent is E.T. I've seen fourteen of the twenty, although of those I can only recall the music for about half. I agree that the Ben Hur score is one of the best, if not the best. I loved that music as a teenager; the soundtrack album was one of the first LPs that I bought when I got a record player. 

    I'd like to have seen the scores for either Hatari or Arabesque on the list, both by Henry Mancini. A list concentrating on more recent films, say from 1980 onward, would be interesting. 

    Movie and TV Reviews - December 2021

    Here are some short reviews of things I watched in December. With my wife's mom in a care home, we've had more time to watch TV.

    Movies

    • A Christmas Letter: I can't stand most Christmas movies but I did enjoy this one. I probably wouldn't have watched it if it hadn't been shot in and around my hometown of Sault Ste. Marie. It's light and the plot is implausible but the acting and writing are above average. (CBC Gem)
    • Art in Practice: Encountering the Buddha with the Philip Glass Ensemble. See my review here. (YouTube)
    • The Matrix: Resurectons. The first third of this was interesting, but then it degenerated in a kung fu-filled muddled mess. 

    TV Shows

    • Mr. Palfrey of Westminster: This is a 1980s British show about a mild-mannered spy-catcher. We watched a couple of episodes but found it too dated to keep watching. For Britphiles only. (Acorn TV)
    • Inspector Lewis: This is a sequel to Endeavour and Inspector Morse, following Morse's sergeant, Lewis, who is now an inspector. It's very well done with good acting, twisty plots, and deep characterization. Who knew that there was so much crime and depravity in the quiet university town of Oxford? (PBS Masterpiece)
    • Foundation: The series is supposedly based on Isaac Asimov's classic series of science fiction novels but it largely to have diverged into its own story. That was probably just as well, given that the original books were static and preachy. Unfortunately, it meanders into some subplots that make no sense and the characters, except for one exception, are unappealing. The best part of the show was the plot revolving around Creon, the triune emperor. Otherwise, it was a complete waste of time. (Apple TV+)
    • Invasion: I was hoping for a wide-scale alien invasion story akin to Niven and Pournelle's Footfall, but instead I got a muddled mess akin to Lost. So disappointing. (Apple TV+)
    • War of the Worlds (Season 2): The first season did little for me and the second season isn't much better. (CBC Gem)
    • The Witcher (Season 2): This season was better than the first, which I found almost unwatchable. That doesn't mean it was good, but at least I could follow what was going on some of the time. 
    • The Wheel of Time: I wasn't sure how this series would go after the first couple of episodes, as it seemed a bit juvenile and the tone was wildly inconsistent. But as the season progressed, it got better and better, and I was totally engrossed by the final episode. (Amazon Prime)
    • The Expanse (Season 6): The "final" season (scare quotes because there are rumours it will continue after all) continues straight on from the end of season 5, but begins to introduce the Laconia plot from the last three books in the trilogy. This is about as good as SF TV shows get. (Amazon Prime)
    • Agatha Raisin (Season 4): The first episode of the season is a Christmas episode. The blurb describes the show as "quirky and fun", which is accurate. Not to be taken seriously but enjoyable if you want some light entertainment. (Acorn TV)



    Monday, January 03, 2022

    Featured Links - January 3rd, 2022

    Links to things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about.



    Sunday, January 02, 2022

    Photo of the Week - January 2, 2022

    Frenchman's Bay is home to many swans, including Trumpeter swans. This one had just finished diving (unsuccessfully) for food.

    Fujifilm X-S10 with 16-80 mm. F4 at 80 mm., F11, 1/300 second, ISO 400, Provia film simulation


    Saturday, January 01, 2022

    Happy New Year

    Well, we seem to have made it into another year. Let's hope that it turns out to be better than the last one, which was kind of a wild ride.

    Last night, I watched parts of Phish's New Year's Eve show, streamed live without an audience. I was going to embed it here, but it looks like they haven't made it available for viewing after the concert. So here's part of their show from 12/31/2019 instead.