“THERE are many ways to console someone when a multimillion-dollar business deal falls through. Firing off a “tough break” e-mail message punctuated by a frown-face emoticon is not one of them.”
Really?
(via)
“THERE are many ways to console someone when a multimillion-dollar business deal falls through. Firing off a “tough break” e-mail message punctuated by a frown-face emoticon is not one of them.”
Really?
(via)
Michael Goldenberg, screenwriter for Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, talks to Salon about the “pleasures and pitfalls” of the adaptation process.
Why y’all will never have daughters and why men who harass women are not sexist. These and other such politically incorrect truths… (via)
There is a new book called More Sex is Safer Sex and it is written by a male economist called Landsburg. Clever plan, Mr. Landsburg. Here is a New York Times review of the book that questions the value of the recent spate of “popular” economics books that purport to unlock the mysteries of the world using cold, hard numbers. And on a unrelated note, here is James Surowiecki (whose book we loved!) on The Pirates’ Code.
Martin Cruz Smith (MSNBC helpfully informs us that he is “one of those writers who get such high-mindedly good reviews that you wonder if he’s any fun. Relax: he’s literate and exciting”) has just written his newest Arkady Renko novel — it’s called Stalin’s Ghost — and the Times carries a high-mindedly good review of it. Meanwhile, from Time Magazine, here is a review of Gorky Park, the first Arkady Renko book.
Steel yourself for some bad news: Pesky scientists at Clemson University have apparently determined that applying the five-second rule to dropped food will not actually prevent the food from gathering bacteria. And apparently, there is no exception for key lime pies. No wonder science sucks.
A John Irving review of Günter Grass’s Peeling the Onion. [etcetera: We’ll even read phonebooks if Irving writes them. ]
Haruki Murakami on music (and language). (Older Murakami posts [1] [2] [3] )
A few guys at Industrial Light and Magic are “working on the side” making an Arthur C Clarke short story (Maelstrom II) into a movie. Wired has a few cool pictures. (via)
Overheard in New York. Laugh out loud exchanges from the greatest(!) city on earth. (Most popular exchanges).