Category: Sad

It Was Good Until Halftime

If you’re wondering where I was the last couple days, I was in Eugene where I watched USC beat the living crap out of Oregon (on a side-note, why do I have to wait until noon or until Monday to get it from the two Eugene daily newspapers, forcing me to link the O-live site, which I hate to do?). It was a great game until half-time when USC finally quit dinking around and started to play. The Ducks showed some moments of good play, and I think they’re a good team. I just think USC is good enough to beat many pro teams, especially if Reggie Bush keeps healthy. It’s one thing to watch that guy on TV, but when you watch him in person you realize how good he really is. His ability to make folks miss, and to get the extra yards when he has six guys hanging from him is uncanny.

And while the OSU/ASU game was less of a rout by the score, I think OSU would’ve gotten clobbered worse by USC.

But now, it’s Sunday, and like always, back to work…

Parenting At Its Finest

It’s one thing if you’re stupid enough to risk your own life when a hurricane’s coming, but don’t get your little kid involved.

FEMA: A Legacy Of Waste

This is an incredible piece of investigative journalism that’s been well-packaged online. It documents how FEMA has just been wasting tax-payer’s dollars for years.

The paper has investigated how $9 million in FEMA tornado recovery money went to people in Miami-Dade County, even though the storm hit up to 37 miles away. More than $5 million in “free money” went to people in the Los Angeles area, even though wildfires burned up to 30 miles away. And $168.5 million went to people in Detroit to help recover from a storm that people have trouble even remembering.

It’s just scary to see how much money went to places with little or no damage.

Thanks Al for the links.

Really Bad Ad Cliches

Sadly, in designing an ad recently, I used copy from a professional ad copywriter that included some of these. It bothered me, but the client hired this guy to do it, so what can you do?

Windows Vista To Come in Seven Versions

It’s bad enough that there are several versions of Windows XP (Home, Professional, Media Center, Tablet, 64-bit, etc…), but it looks like Windows Vista, the next version of Windows, is going to come out of the gate in seven versions: Vista Starter Edition, Vista Home Basic Edition, Vista Home Premium Edition, Vista Ultimate Edition, Vista Small Business Edition, Vista Professional Edition, and Vista Enterprise Edition.

Does anybody else find that a touch confusing? Reading the article just makes it worse. More discussion here.

More New Orleans Links: Lousy Gov’t Response, Heroes, Volunteers, and More

I apologize for all the Katrina links lately, but this is a massive story that is not going to stop developing any time soon (especially once we get official death numbers).

I do I wish I could make it down south right now — I’d love to help out with this in the best way I could, and this would be my cup of tea: A group of volunteers (with some help from some major corporations) is trying to wire up Houston and New Orleans so that they can get communication systems back up and going. Part of the community effort is getting documented here, and more on BoingBoing. So any of you with Wireless network, mesh network, VoIP, low-power FM radio, etc… , be sure to donate your time.

Note for geeks out there with Internet2 access (which means you’re probably in college), your traffic might be suffering a tad.

On a side note, I won’t get into my feelings about the government’s piss-poor response to all this (stories like this, this, this, this, this, this and this sicken me), but I do get very angry when I see stories like this of very valuable resources going mostly unused.

But on a brighter note, PayPal allows you to setup a fee-free donation page for Katrina victims, and there are a pile of colleges helping out students. Also, here’s a flickr photo collection from a volunteer who’s wiring up the Astrodome.

On a totally random note, here’s a nutjob that thinks Hurricane Katrina was a guided weapon (with more conspiracy theories here).

Thanks to Waxy and BoingBoing and many others for all these links.

More New Orleans Links

First off, we all probably all know what’s going on on the Gulf Coast right now. New Orleans is an underwater mess, looting is rampant, there is no control or communication as to what is going on, and the Army Corp of Engineers still hasn’t plugged the levy breaks. As I mentioned before, I hope something really bad happens to the jerks who are looting for the sake of profit and not for the sake of feeding their family. I also hope that all the morons who are trying to impede rescue efforts by forcing police to head to the streets also get what’s coming to them.

Anyway, these are the links about this whole mess that I’ve seen the last couple days (in no particular order at all).

Meanwhile, don’t forget to donate. I’m basically broke, but my wife and I are going to be digging up some cash to send along (as we did with the Tsunami). You should, too.

New Orleans Is A Mess

Needless to say, the newspaper there isn’t printing today (despite a mention on their site yesterday that they were going to try to use a printing press in Baton Rouge). But they have produced and distributed the entire paper online in PDF format. You can also view Newspaper front pages from around the world at Newseum.

It’s certainly a mess in New Orleans right now. And to think that if I still worked for my previous company, I’d probably be in New Orleans in October, though there’s a small chance the convention might not be held, as it was scheduled to be held at the Hyatt in New Orleans which was pummeled by the storm.

While it’s sad that there was all this destruction in that are, and I wouldn’t wish it on anybody, it’s hard for me to feel sorry for the idiots who, despite plenty of warning, stayed around to watch the storm out. I watched plenty of footage on CNN of folks stranded up on rooftops, having to be rescued by Coast Guard helicopters. But I have ask: Why the hell are you still there? You knew this was coming, you had plenty of warning, so unless you’re part of the clean-up or rescue efforts or some other important official (some media is important, as are some government officials), you should’ve gotten the hell out of town a long time ago. This thing was a Category 5 storm as it moved across the Gulf — I would’ve left town a long time ago.

I also wonder about the idiot who drove his car into a road-turned-lake while a news reporter was on camera. He had to drop his microphone and run into the water to rescue the moron, pulling him through his car window. That clip got played a hundred times on CNN last night and wondered about the sanity of both the reporter for being out in that storm and the nit-wit who drove his sedan into the flood.

As usual, Wikipedia has a ton of links and information regarding the storm, its effects both physically and economically, and a bit of science about the storm as well. For journalists (and even the general public), Al has a bunch of tips and useful links.

People Love Their Pets Too Much

I can’t say that I’d like to meet the people who would buy a stuffed-animal urn to put their deceased pet’s ashes in. That’s just disturbing.

Oregon Will Have A “State Fruit”

Your tax dollars at work, folks.

I haven’t seen this hit Google News or the Governor’s site yet, but here’s the full press release that media services sent out:

MEDIA ADVISORY

FOR NEWS PLANNING

August 22, 2005

Media Contacts:

Holly Armstrong, (503) 378-6169

Anna Richter Taylor, (503) 378-6496

*** TOMORROW ***

Governor Kulongoski to Designate the Oregon Pear As the Official State Fruit

(Salem, OR) – Tomorrow Governor Ted Kulongoski will be joined by the Pear Bureau, pear growers, and representatives from the packing houses for a ceremony recognizing the pear as Oregon’s state fruit. The state fruit seal will also be unveiled at the ceremony.

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

10:00 a.m.

Governor’s Ceremonial Office

Salem, Oregon

Sounds like a party. Wish I could make it. Thanks Barn for the release.