Author Archive

What’s Up, Doc?

Posted May 18, 2006 By Dave Thomer

Well, it’s official. I’ve defended the thesis, turned in the final copy, written the last of my term papers, and paid off all my library fines. Today I received my diploma from Temple, and I am officially a Ph.D. in Philosophy, possibly the most redundant degree ever. 🙂

There’s a lot of housecleaning to do, along with the not insignificant matter of finding a job, but I do intend to return to near-daily blogging from here on out. I just may steer clear of the heavy philosophical stuff for another few days. 🙂

Just Pining for the Fjords

Posted March 26, 2006 By Dave Thomer

I know content has slowed to a trickle lately. Heck, a trickle might be optimistic. I’m in the middle of a number of things that will hopefully provide much fodder for discussion soon enough, not the least of which is the defense of my dissertation coming up in less than two weeks. So we’re not dead. We’re just resting.

Campaigns and Bad Timing

Posted March 13, 2006 By Dave Thomer

Man, spring break disappeared in a blink. Let me see if I can get back into the groove.

One news item that caught my eye in the last couple of weeks concerns Pennsylvania’s Lt. Governor race. In PA, there are separate primaries for Governor and Lt. Governor, and then the primary winners run together as a ticket in the general election. So a gubernatorial candidate doesn’t get to pick his or her running mate. This was somewhat unfortunate back in 2002, because Ed Rendell wound up with Catherine Baker Knoll as a running mate. Knoll has a lot of name recognition and a long career in elected office, but she never struck me as the strongest candidate. And she has apparently made a few gaffes in the last four years to boot. So when I heard that a few people were gearing up to challenge her in this year’s primary, I was pleased. I took particular notice when Joe Hoeffel, who ran for Senate in 2004 and whose e-mail list I subscribe to, started talking about running. His position was that he would not run if Rendell specifically asked him not to. Rendell said he wasn’t going to support Hoeffel, but he wouldn’t stop him either. So Hoeffel organized some petition gatherers, got himself the necessary signatures, filed to run, scheduled an announcement tour, and started to gear up his web site.

At which point Rendell said, “Boy, I sure wish he’d think about withdrawing.” So 24 hours after Hoeffel officially got into the race, he was out.

Now, as a voter, I’m all for primaries. I think they’re a useful way for a party and its elected officials to debate and set priorities. I’m saddened that Bob Casey isn’t facing more of a challenge in the senatorial primary, for example. But I understand why candidates don’t feel the same way. Running a campaign, and gathering the resources for it, is not an easy task, and recruiting top candidates can be harder if they have to face two tough elections and not just one. There are some people who are criticizing Rendell for interfering in a primary this way; they cite the fact that Rendell ran against the party-supported candidate in 2002’s primary and won. But I don’t think that makes Rendell a hypocrite. A candidate doesn’t have to drop out when party leaders try to clear the field. If the candidate is strong enough, and has built his or her own base of voter and financial support, he or she can run against the establishment and then become the establishment. And with this particular position, I can see how the governor would like a voice in his running mate. But the timing is pretty ridiculous. Why put Hoeffel’s supporters through the whole rigamarole and then pull the rug out so quickly?

My suspicion, and it’s really a very wild guess, is that at first, Hoeffel’s run looked like it would just be a way for Hoeffel to raise his name recognition and some issues in the primary. But then he got the endorsement of some county parties here in southwest PA, and it looked like he could actually win. At which point party leaders elsewhere in the state realized they could be looking at a ticket with two white guys from Philadelphia and its suburbs. And if you don’t know much about PA politics, lemme tell you that doesn’t play well in the rest of the state. Still, it’s a very odd story.

There are still other candidates in the Lt. Governor primary. Several PA bloggers have said good things about Valerie McDonald Roberts, Allegheny County recorder of deeds. I’ll be tracking her campaign over the next several weeks.

I Love the Smell of Silicon in the Morning

Posted March 3, 2006 By Dave Thomer

I’m in the process of breaking in a new Dell PC, which is actually going rather smoothly now that I figured out which of the video ports on the back I was actually supposed to plug the monitor into. Next up is wiping my old Dell clean, installing Windows XP on it, and giving it to Pattie. Since the copy of XP that I have was given to me by a friend shortly after the OS came out, I expect to be hunting for drivers for much of the weekend. So if you hear the rending of garments coming from the northeast U.S., that’s me.

Sorkin Gets the Band Back Together

Posted February 28, 2006 By Dave Thomer

OK, I am officially happy that The West Wing has been cancelled. Because now Bradley Whitford is free to join Matthew Perry and Timothy Busfeld on Aaron Sorkin’s upcoming series Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip. It’s just a matter of time before Joshua Malina shows up, and I’m still holding out hope for Peter Krause. Felicity Huffman’s probably a bit busy for a while, though.

There is absolutely no doubt in my mind that this is the show I am looking forward to most this fall. Because when Sorkin is on, there is no one who thrills, entertains and inspires me the way he does. And this cast looks top-notch. Yee ha!

Bravo to the Boys from Bemidji

Posted February 24, 2006 By Dave Thomer

I still have one curling match left on my DVR to watch, but I gotta say I’m happy to see that the United States’ men’s curling team beat Great Britain for the bronze medal today, the first American medal in curling. (Granted, curling has only been a medal sport since ’98. Still, a first’s a first.) Yes, there’s a certain amount of home-country jingoism going there, but c’mon, how can you root against a guy who owns his own pizzeria? (Pete Fenson, the team captain or “skip,” owns a couple of places in Minnesota, so you know he was happy to go to Italy.) And according to this news brief, CNBC and MSNBC have been getting a million-plus viewers for their daily curling coverage. Granted, that’s still kind of a niche audience, but those are record numbers for those networks.

Now I just hope someone’s going to televise the Men’s World Championship in April. And that Fenson and his team qualify to represent the U.S.

Can People Handle the Power?

Posted February 23, 2006 By Dave Thomer

I’m taking a couple of political science seminars this semester, for various reasons too boring to go into here. Both focus on different dimensions of how the public makes its desires known and how government responds to those wishes. I’m probably going to do a set of posts musing about some of the things I read in the process, but for now I just want to pose a question that is the Achilles’ heel of my faith in democracy.

Does the average citizen have what it takes to make democracy work?

Do we know enough to make informed decisions? Do we have the temperament to make good decisions? Are we capable of expressing what we want? And if the answer to any of these questions is “no” right now, do we have a realistic chance of changing that?

Cruel and Unusual Death?

Posted February 21, 2006 By Dave Thomer

I’m following this death penalty case out in California out of the corner of my eye. There appear to be some concerns that the chemicals used to execute by lethal injection can cause several minutes of extreme pain before taking full effect, which has raised the possibility that lethal injection reaches the level of cruel and unusual punishment. Doctors in California have refused to sign off on the chemicals being used, so the state needs to come up with a different chemical cocktail.

I say I’m following it out of the corner of my eye because part of me thinks that once you reach the point of killing someone, how quickly you do it is almost a side issue. Intellectually I understand that it is not – that minimizing the suffering involved is vital if capital punishment is going to be an issue of justice rather than vengeance. But the exact how-it’s-done is not something that reaches me on an emotional level, because I question whether capital punishment can possibly be made to serve justice. But if this case opens up the field for a discussion of exactly what we hope to accomplish with the death penalty, then I’m all for it.

Dusty Corners of the Web

Posted February 17, 2006 By Dave Thomer

I will admit that I am occasionally egotistical enough to do web searches for my name. In a small part, this is because I’m looking for folks who might be mentioning or linking to this site. Another large factor is that it reminds me that there sure is not much that gets permanently lost on the web. Since I almost always use my own name on message boards, there are any number of things I’ve said over the last decade floating around in various web archives at this point, and they go further back into my teenage years if you count Google Groups. (I’m kind of glad that it doesn’t look like a lot of FidoNet is archived on the web. I cringe enough at some of the things I said when I was 14 when I’m the only guy who remembers them.)

One thing that I am certainly glad has found an archived home is the collection of chats/interviews that Omni Interactive sponsored back in the day. I spent a couple of months working for Omni right out of college, and it was not my favorite working experience. Omni had been converted from a print magazine to a web site, and the feel of the guillotine was there . . . indeed, a few months after I left, even the site was shut down. Also, the parent company is the same one that owned Penthouse, so when I went to work I was just surrounded by Penthouse-related artwork and publications. It was not the most comfortable of environments. But one thing that did come out of the whole thing is that I got to host some of these chats, specifically within the E-Media series. I got to talk to comics artist Frank Miller about censorship, Babylon 5 composer Christopher Franke about music technology, and someone from the Henson Company Creature Shop when they were pitching this thing called Farscape. Even the Omni site is gone these days, but someone’s archived its contents, including all the chats. So you can check them out if you are so inclined.

Red Star on the Silver Screen?

Posted February 16, 2006 By Dave Thomer

I feel like blogging some good news tonight. Universal Studios has optioned The Red Star. There aren’t many details i nthat article, and it mostly focuses on the Russian director that is developing the film, but this is great news for Christian Gossett and the folks at Archangel Studios. Not only is it a nifty bit of validation, I have a sneaking suspicion that this option is helping to finance the comics projects that Goss has been dropping hints about on his blog. And believe you me, more Red Star comics is very very good news indeed.