Web Criticism

I’m seeing more and more signs for Virg Bernero and Carol Wood on the side of the road.  I’m wondering how much these campaigns are going to be costing the major players, and I’m wondering how much of a monkey wrench I’ll end up being.

Ms. Wood has finally established her web presence (link on the right), and… I’m searching for something nice to say.  Splash page?  Width-specific background image?  It’s put together like a Myspace page.  That is to say, designed to make one want to tear out one’s eyes with one’s fingernails.  It’s even worse once the splash page is bypassed, especially if you’re not using Internet Explorer.  Just, wow.  I really, really hope that she’s not paying anybody for that.

Mr. Bernero’s site is down right now, as far as I can tell (also linked to on the right).  My web browser is reporting “Done”, though there is no text, and nothing in my “View Source” function.  Come to think of it, the last time I tried to get to Ms. Wood’s page, I got a placeholder squatter page.  Whoop, there it goes, Bernero’s site came up.  Clean, well-designed, linked to Twitter… it takes advantage of the technologies that the web has to offer.  My guess is that he’s hired a fairly savvy web designer, and is using a PR firm that is at least vaguely familiar with technology trends.

Should I follow Virg on Twitter?  Jury is still out on that one.  I can’t wade through the overlapping text on Carol’s site to even find a Twitter link.

There’s got to be others running for this position.  Time for a bit of research.

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Lady in the Water and Frequency

I’m generally a fan of this director, despite my inability to pronounce his last name. I’ve always thought that it was nifty that he does a cameo in his movies, and that sometimes his character breaks the rules. Signs was okay, but had serious plot issues. Unbreakable was good enough to own, and I liked The Sixth Sense. With this one, the commercials put me off more than they attracted me to it.

Since it was in ‘s queue, and it’d been sitting on the shelf since February, I resigned myself to watching it. I was pleasantly surprised that it wasn’t a horror movie, but instead was a fairy tale. The acting was good, despite the extremely odd nature of the characters. It took a bit of effort to get over the suspension of disbelief, but was worth it once I did. Three stars.

Another one of ‘s picks. I hadn’t even heard of this one before it arrived in the mail. I liked the emotional link between father and son, and I really liked how tied into each other’s actions the main characters became. The way it handled time travel was very irritating, though. No paradoxes. No consequences to remembering more than one history. Very few/limited difficulties with being outside of the time stream, after it’s been re-written. It was more of a drama/action movie with a science fiction vehicle, instead of a science fiction movie. In that sense, it was good. In any case, it was an enjoyable and emotional movie. Three stars.

Reasonable

Hi, my name is Dave Crampton, and I’m reasonable.  Well, as long as you don’t ask my wife, I’m reasonable.  And as such a person, I have compiled a list of reasons (pun!) that would bar me from such a political office.

  • I haven’t proven myself in politics.  Flip side of this coin: I haven’t been corrupted by politics.  Both reasons that I’d never get elected.
  • I actually like living in Lansing.  I think it’s a good place to be.
  • I have a family, which comes before everything else, including office.
  • The only ass that I kiss is my wife’s, and that’s rare.
  • Carol Wood?  Seriously?  (Obligatory baseless slam!  Go me!)
  • I am The Man.  I am white, male, educated, and overweight.
  • I have some conservative viewpoints. (Fascist!)
  • I have some liberal viewpoints. (Pinko commie long-hair hippie!)
  • I like riding CATA.  Bus crazy people make me smile.
  • I see infrastructure as the basic building block needed to keep residents and businesses happy.  Having a meaty ideal instead of an empty sound bite should scare you all the way down into your booties.
  • I am a nerd.  I am also proud of it.
  • I abhor waste of any kind.  I drive my wife and friends nuts talking about reuse and recycling.
  • I can use the word abhor in a sentence.

I’ll be expounding on these and others in other posts.  Anything else that you’d like to see in a Mayor but would prevent him from getting in office?

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Transformers Animated: Transform and Roll Out and WALL-E

This is the intro piece to the most recent animated Transformers series, aptly named Transformers Animated. I’ve been wanting to watch this for a while, for several reasons. The toys seem to be incredibly faithful to the cartoon, as far as robot mode, vehicle mode, and transformation between. This is something that’s been lacking from TF series over the years. Also, they seem to be recycling lots of old characters, but doing it with both respect and skill. Not only that, but it’s set in a not-too-far-off Detroit, which makes me very happy. The Ambassador Bridge shows up in the background quite a bit.

While the animation quality and frame rate leave something to be desired, the characters are great, the old transformation sound is used, and the characters hole up in an abandoned warehouse and use it as HQ. Did somebody give me roofies and have me write a TF cartoon without my knowledge? Four stars.

Once again, I had conflicting feelings about watching a kids’ movie. But I’d heard so many good things about it that I couldn’t resist. Somebody’s reading my mind again when writing cartoon scripts. I felt ridiculously uplifted and happy when this movie ended. I can’t say too much about it that you haven’t seen in the commercials without ruining it, but even the extra animated short in the DVD was made of giggles. We now own a copy, and I’ll be watching this again in the future. Four stars.

The Maxx – Volume 2

The Maxx - Volume 2 The Maxx – Volume 2 by Sam Kieth

My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
Another sequence of mind-poking artwork and twisty storylines. I don’t remember this much being revealed so early in the animated version, so I’m definitely looking forward to reading the other volumes. Once again, I have to thank the Capital Area District Library for shelving an amazing selection of graphic novels. I’m biting my nails to read Volume 3.

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FOOL by Christopher Moore

Fool: A Novel Fool: A Novel by Christopher Moore

My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
Another good find at the Capital Area District Library. I’d already read Lamb, so I snagged this one when I saw it on the “New Releases” shelf. I was not disappointed.

I giggled throughout the whole thing. I had so much difficulty in putting it down that I got several chilly looks from my wife. It’s raunchy, political, pointed, and hilarious. King Lear’s fool tells all. :) I think I’ll be reading this one again sometime in the future.

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To quote King Lear’s Fool, “fuckstockings.”

I went to do some soul-searching today. I went down to the Brenke Fish Ladder in Old Town, because that’s where I go. That’s where I feel like I’m close to the heart of Lansing. That’s where I feel connected to myself and my surroundings.

Lansing’s river walk trail goes right through here, and intersects with an access point to the river itself. The access point is a beautiful deck that (usually) sits just above the water level, and continues a natural jut into the river. To the right side of this deck is a set of cement stairs that lead down into the river itself. Those stairs are an excellent place to sit, watch the river, and contemplate. That’s where I was headed.

A few thunderstorms ago, the Grand River had risen to its highest level in years. The water came up nearly a foot above the stairs, and should have completely hidden the deck from sight, save for the railings. For some reason, the deck’s posts didn’t stay secured in the bed of the river during the storm. The deck floated up as the water rose, pulling its posts free and damaging all of the points where it was connected to the rest of the deck, which was mounted to dry land. Today, when I went there to do some serious thinking, it was still blocked off, and in need of repairs.

I chuckled when I saw that… the deck is how I feel. Still standing up, still in one piece as far as the eye can tell, but in no shape for use. Who knows how much weight it would take to push out one of the posts or break the sections of wood planks apart. I decided that bathing in irony was preferable to bathing in the Grand River, so I headed over to the fish ladder itself.

I passed a few fishermen and a few park-goers before I passed around the pumping (?) station and down the amphitheater inside the ring made by the fish ladder. I walked the steps, looking over the side as the water from the river made its way down to the post-man-made-waterfall river. I noted where the sand had gathered from the repeated floods, and stepped through the ever-present silt on the bottom level. Enough has gathered that weeds have taken root, despite not having access to the concrete itself. I sat down on one of the amphitheater’s seats, put my heads in my hands, and moped about what I would do.

I asked my city to help me, to aid me, and to direct me. Yes, that’s a bit pagan of me, but hey… I’m pagan. :) How often do Christians ask to be shown the way or be given a hint in their prayers? I was just asking somebody more local. And it wasn’t in vain. I never get straight-up answers. Flashes of insight or clarity sometimes, a remembered song lyric or snippet of conversation other times. This time, I felt that Lansing and my heightened frustrations of late would be healed hand in hand. Okay, so what the crap does that mean?

Are we talking healing through helping the economy? That would point me to putting all of my efforts into the proto company. Are we talking more of a leadership role? Should I focus on my glorious, hilarious, possibly effectual irony fest? Or are we talking about something as simple and long-term as being a father to my son and stepsons? Something that I feel like I am failing gloriously at, BTW. So, with cryptic answer in hand, I sought out free wireless access and delicious coffee, which is where I’m at now.

I’m in a funk. A trough. (Anything to avoid saying a depression-related low?) I’m snapping for no reason, and the kids are bearing the brunt of it. I’m desperate for a job. I want to be left alone, all of the time. When people try to get close to me, I shrink away, and try to keep my personal space sacred. I’m so completely wrapped up in this that it’s a nearly impossible task to consider others.

This is not the right state of mind in which to be a good father. Or a good husband. Or a good anything. I can only use my favorite spots in the city as an emotional crutch for so long.

Becoming an insomniac isn’t working. New solutions must be found.

Also, the Temple Club has a “SOLD” sign on it.