I'm sorry not to have gotten this advice to you last week, but USA Today warned us Are you preparing a Memorial Day cookout? Don't risk food poisoning.
I'm posting this because it strikes me as 'good anytime' advice. Go forth, you cookers-outers, and heed this advice!
We seem to have interlocking themes going here. We apologize.
About that petard.
It seems I've been running into the phrase 'hoist on his own petard' a lot.
While it's a fun phrase to say, I have to admit I keep forgetting what a petard is (if I ever knew). So off to the dictionary I hie myself.
A petard, I discover, is a small bomb. OK, not getting the picture of being hoist by it, no wait, the petarder is blown up by his own device, as in caught in the blast.
A petard can also be a large noise. Seems appropriate somehow, although I can't picture being lifted up by one.
What about lollipops and rainbows? Don't they deserve protection too?
The bill in Congress that will make Daylight Savings Time be in effect year 'round is named the 'Sunshine Protection Act.'
I don't know exactly what this means, but I wouldn't be surprised to see enforcers in aircraft lassoing clouds and pulling them out of the projected path if the sun. Tickets might be issued, too. And how does not jiggling with our clocks protect sunshine?
Not news, WSJ!
This headline is not going to surprise anyone who knows anything about business: Rival airlines are carving up Spirit’s routes and airport slots
These headlines have greater surprise value: 'Sun to rise in East tomorrow,' 'Illegal fireworks on Fourth of July,' 'Church services held on Sunday morning!' 'Babies born yesterday.'
The AISlop cometh.
It is predicted by everybody and nobody in particular, as is the way of the social media these days, that AI is going to automate everything. I suspect that's not really true, and some people say that people who are 'creative' won't be replaced.
But in some areas of entertainment, the transformation may already be complete. I'm thinking of network situation comedies, where in the 50s you had the Stones, the Cleavers, the Nelsons, the Andersons, or the Mitchells, all working the same formula and jokes. Maybe you prefer the mid to late 90s-early 2Ks sitcoms: 'a number of attractive young people hang out in an apartment' series, like Three's Company, Seinfeld, Friends, The Big Bang Theory, Will & Grace, The Drew Carey Show, and Living Single.
Maybe the question shouldn't be 'will it happen?' but 'when did it happen first?'
Names to forget.
A recent WSJ Magazine cover featured a photo of a young man with the caption, Colman Domingo, Man of the Hour.
On the plus side, '15 minutes of fame' seems to have quadrupled. On the down side, you've only got a sixty-minute period in which to make a career-extending impact.
Sic transit gloria mundi.
So when are people supposed to have their crisis?
Also in the WSJ, the editor points out that the term 'midlife' is falling into disfavor. Apparently this is another form of denial, the 'seven ages of man' is shrinking toward two—vibrant living and not living.
The editor goes on to say I see...only a feeble insecurity in the rejection of middle age.
I mention that not because I agree (frankly, I'm not quite sure what it means), but because I misread it, substituting 'female' for 'feeble.' Of course, I thought, men have midlife crises and women have... menopause.
The big difference? Men have to manufacture a midlife crisis, or at best we're responding to some vague sense or feeling, while women have a clear sign that 'things are different now.' For some, it's liberating to assume their identity. For others, it's a sign that life is over. For still others, they are fortunate enough to blaze forward on the path they forged, following their life vision.
But wait, there's more.
We're seeing another handover of the generational lead (if only in the targets of up-and-comer wrath and mockery switching from OK Boomers to Gen Xers). Yeah, some of us old farts have been mucking up the works by hanging on way too long, but other signs are there. Like the WSJ Magazine I've been referencing celebrates that people in their late thirties and mid-fifties are doing things in areas they're not supposed to do them in and should be ceded to youth. Like making movies and competing in athletics.
In the past, transitions have been mostly clear. Kennedy signaled the new frontier. Clinton also symbolized a changing of the guard. It's time again.
Redefining terms.
Today we're changing older to 'projecting as my age plus.' It has nothing to do with chronology. Dick VanDyke, for example, may have a quarter century on me, but he is not older. People who have only lived 60 years or so can be older than me. 'Older' has nothing to do with age, infirmity, or activity, or health or wisdom. It has to do with attitude.
I think of my grandmother at 80, being wheeled through the activity room of her nursing home, referring to the card players (who were ten or 15 years her junior) as 'the old ladies.' I didn't understand then.
I understand better now.
And here I thought...
I used 'ditto' in a poem the other day, and wondered, in that superior, patronizing way that I have sometime when I'm alone, 'Do the yeuts of today know where the word ditto comes from, now that the Ditto machine (AKA 'purple poop,' beloved of schoolchildren everywhere) has gone the way of tail fins on DeSotos?
Wanting to know when/if the Ditto went away, I checked.
Good thing I did. Turns out 'ditto' has nothing to do with printing machines, but instead was imported from Italy in the Seventeenth Century to avoid repeating dates. It acquired its 'like before' meaning soon after.
Another thing I did not know.
The eye is the only part of the body that remains the same size all through life as it is at birth.
Fighting fire with fire.
This is one of those pieces that I'm not sure where to begin. Choice one is the original annoyance: overly long web articles where the raison d'etre is buried at the end of the article (if it appears at all). Choice two is the little boxed AI summaries that have been appearing at the top of those overly long web articles, obviating the need to read them, much less sort for substance.
Choice three is to start with the prompt for this article, which was Jeff Goins commenting that Half of these sentences [in those A.I. generated articles] don’t even need to exist.
Happy birthday?
You may have noticed an uptick in references to the works of Mark Twain. That's OK–they're mostly relevant, even though Twain died over 115 years ago.
But—is he really dead? Every time I invoke some of his work, or think about him, or read something of his, doesn't that bring him back to life? And when I mention him, doesn't that bring him to life in your head?
I ask this because a headline said something about 'Miles Davis' 100th birthday.' 'I didn't know he was still alive,' I thought.
He's not–died in 1991. But now. that I'm thinking about him, and the article writer is thinking about him, and somebody is probably playing his music somewhere, is he really dead?
Yes. And no.
Wrong verb modifier, USA Today!
In this headline, replace 'could' with 'will:'
US Postal Service says it could raise first-class stamp prices.
More language.
On a more serious note, Bradley Birzer, in a review of The Idea Machine, notes Miller loves creating, embracing, and profound tidbits of wisdom.
Thus is created confusion. I'm not sure if that's an incomplete parallel construction he's got there, or if there should be more after 'wisdom,' or some other linguistic feat of legerdemain with which I am not familiar. Any way, it's a head-scratching, 'say what?' moment.
Just a thought or two.
for writers, mostly:
The word you are writing at this very instant has the power to change the choice or the meaning of the next word you write. You're making it up as you go along.
In the same way, the word you are writing now has the power to transform the word you just wrote.
The words your audience is reading are not necessarily the same words you wrote, and are probably attached to a narrative in their head you never conceived or even know exists, much less where you were leading.