Wow. Just, wow.
Best invention...ever? Seriously, even better than I could've ever imagined, and I think I want one, now. Just because.
All the junk that's fit to blog about! (Read: cool stuff like TV, media, cats, TV, crossword puzzles, cartoons, football, TV).
Best invention...ever? Seriously, even better than I could've ever imagined, and I think I want one, now. Just because.
Just wanted to give a link to this post that lists all the different things anyone has blamed so far for the VA Tech shootings earlier this week.
I met NBC News President Steve Capus once, while I was an intern at the LA Bureau for NBC News. He's got a surprisingly quiet and modest demeanor for someone who so capably manages such a large number of powerful people, heading up NBC Network News as well as overseeing MSNBC (directly led by Dan Abrams). Despite being the highest-ranking executive in the room, he was definitely the easiest to talk to and the one I was least afraid to introduce myself to.
On to relevant information. I first noticed Steve Capus showing up in the news last week following the Imus scandal, after he fired the morning cable news personality. Today, Capus is again the subject of headlines, after NBC News received correspondence from the shooter at VA Tech, sent just prior to his violent rampage. NBC News is now a part of the investigation, not just doing the investigating.
News about the news and journalists happens all the time (Katie Couric's move to CBS, Bob Woodruff's injury in Iraq, plus all the media analysis seen daily on The Daily Show and Countdown with Keith Olbermann). But it's interesting that NBC News and its leader are in the spotlight for a full two weeks in a row, and both times for something basically out of Capus' control. It'll be interesting to see what befalls NBC News next week.
One of the most unfortunate media debacles over the VA Tech shootings today was the multiple false accusations levied against Wayne Chiang, an Asian-American student at VA Tech who happens to collect guns and lives in the dorm where the first shootings occurred.
I first heard of him perusing Digg this afternoon and one of the newer stories was a link to his Facebook Photo Albums, a few showcasing his gun collection. The Digg entry (likely based off of info on this Digg entry) labeled him as "kinda nuts... is this the Virginia shooter?" I still have yet to find any good video of it, but according to his livejournal (which he's been updating all day, long after the real shooter died), Fox News was putting his pictures and his face all over the airwaves, possibly also accusing him of being responsible for the deaths of 32 people.
I promptly "buried" the Digg story, hoping to push it down in the rankings, labeling it as outright inaccurate. I instinctively knew it couldn't possibly be based on any sound journalism and was most likely nothing more than jumping to conclusions based on stereotypes. Yes, it may be the dream of every citizen journalist (or wannabe citizen journalist) to unearth something shocking and important on the internet like finding the identity of a mass murderer on Facebook (somehow before Facebook rapidly takes down their profile, a la Holly Ashcraft). But that's a hard dream to realize if you're just the average Digg user, especially since most Digg users just keep passing on pages and pages of information without verifying where any of it came from. Because of this, Digg is great for gauging what's being read and what's making its way around the blogosphere, but it is by no means a reliable source of information.
Knowing this, I didn't make too much of a fuss, chalking it up to overreactive Digg users passing along the information as quickly as possible, hoping they'd struck gold and could maybe take some credit for it. That is, until Geraldo Rivera allegedly got into the mix. If I find I've misunderstood the Fox News broadcast about Chiang, I'll recant everything I'm about to say, but for the second time today, I find myself criticizing Fox News' journalistic ethics. First it was the inclusion of Jack Thompson, clearly trying to inject unnecessary controversy into a very sensitive and still raw subject. Now, Rivera, jumping to the same unfounded, stereotype- and rumor-based conclusions as Facebook users with overactive imaginations. Simply put, Fox News has done nothing but degrade its own credibility as a source for actual news as opposed to a national television outlet for rumors, hype and unfounded accusations of a wide variety.
Update: Just a rant: Seriously, people, this is not the guy. Asian+guns does NOT equal murderer. So stop Digging his livejournal and calling him a mass murderer, quit calling into news organizations with tips about this "suspicious" livejournal or xanga blog. It's really starting to annoy me.
Washington Post has the e-mails sent to students this morning announcing security measures to be taken after the first shooting at the residence hall on campus.
We've gotten these security e-mails at USC but never for an immediate security risk such as this, they've always been more along the lines of incident reports about muggings etc. that had taken place in the neighborhood, always along with tips for keeping yourself safe late at night in the city.9:50 a.m.
Subject: Please stay put
A gunman is loose on campus. Stay in buildings until further notice. Stay away from all windows.
The next 24 hours should be interesting as this all unfolds...10:52 a.m.
Subject: Second Shooting Reported; Police have one gunman in custody
In addition to an earlier shooting today in West Ambler Johnston, there has been a multiple shooting with multiple victims in Norris Hall.
Police and EMS are on the scene.
Police have one shooter in custody and as part of routine police procedure, they continue to search for a second shooter.
The Virginia Tech student newspaper, The Collegiate Times (currently being redirected to collegemedia.com due to a server breakdown) is still being updated quite frequently. A great source for eye-witness accounts from inside the campus. Of course many are unconfirmed but they've got more details on there than I've seen anywhere else yet.
"It seemed so strange," Sheehan said. "Because he peaked in twice, earlier in the lesson, like he was looking for someone, somebody, before he started shooting. But then we all heard something like drilling in the walls, and someone thought they sounded like bullets. That's when we blockaded the door to stop anyone from coming in."
"He was just a normal looking kid, Asian, but he had on a Boy Scout type outfit. He wore a tan button up vest, and this black vest, maybe it was for ammo or something.
Posted by Janna Banana at 2:48 PM 0 comments
Tags: journalism, media, newspaper, online, student, VA tech
The gaming bloggers are angry, and for good reason. Cable news pundit Jack Thompson reportedly appeared on Fox News today, blaming the deadly shooting at Virginia Tech University on violent video games.
Even as I post this, no one publicly knows who did it, why he did it, or if the guy's even actually a student there. But certainly such premature finger-pointing has to be motivated by one of two things (if not both): a) Thompson's will to exploit a tragedy essentially still unfolding for a personal vendetta against violent games, or b) Fox News Channel's decision to try and pick fights and create controversy rather than just report the facts of the matter.
Aside from the inevitable comparisons to other shooting rampages, such as the 1966 incident at the University of Texas at Austin, or the Columbine school shooting, the news media has nothing more to work with than the occasional first-hand account of students and the facts being presented by school and police authorities. The ongoing news media today has been dominated by local news affiliate video updates, press conferences and speeches by the president and various senators and house members, and updates as the death toll increases throughout the day and new details of the case are revealed.
Clearly Fox was either really stretching for content, or intentionally trying to inject some controversy into the story. Probably the latter. There's no way they'd book Thompson, an outspoken activist against violent games, without knowing exactly what he'd say.
We're used to seeing this Nancy Grace-style fishing for controversy (not to say she's the only one - this could provide a good respite from the depressing news of the day) in the days, weeks and even months following any high-profile incident, and maybe the ratings such fights provide are why cable networks perpetuate the habit and the journalists who work there put up with it. But hours after it happens, surely before many parents even know their child has injured or killed? That's crossing a line.
Posted by Janna Banana at 1:18 PM 0 comments
Tags: cable, CNN, fox, gaming, jack thompson, news, VA tech, video games
Tiki Barber just started at the Today Show (which I read on Wikipedia was like, his childhood dream, or something), but even better, Keith Olbermann is going to be an analyst for NBC's "Football Night in America." One word: AWESOME! (I'm excited for Sept. 6: New Orleans vs. Indianapolis. Sadly, no Vikings games scheduled for NBC, to no one's surprise)
111 days until NFL pre-season games begin, 137 days until NFL Regular season play begins, and (I think) 129 days until College football season begins.
Posted by Janna Banana at 12:27 PM 0 comments
Tags: football, keith olbermann, NBC, sports, tiki barber
...but Will Ferrell put up a surprisingly good fight until the very end. Here's some fan video of Will Ferrell (movie star & USC Alum) vs. Pete Carroll (super-awesome football coach and one of half a dozen namesakes for Pete) in a swimming competition at Swim with Mike, the annual fundraiser for students with disabilities at USC, hosted at the campus' swimming facilities. Will is the one in the speedo (of course).
Plus, here are some pics from the event, from BeatSc.com, viBlogger: Pete's Bananas - Edit Post "Pete wins!"a Deadspin. (warning: more Will Ferrell in a speedo close-ups. Also the pics are quite large and may take awhile to load.)
Update: More video! Not the whole race, but definitely prettier. (Through The Wizard of Odds)
So it's been ten long years since that memorable event...my brother's tenth birthday party. No really, the last normal thing I remember doing before the Grand Forks flood of 1997 hit all of a sudden was going to Players (who else misses that place?) for dinner with my family for my brother Jared's birthday. He got new N64 controllers from my Grandma.
Fortunately my parents planned ahead so I missed out on all the craziness that marked the week of April 16, 1997 for everybody else my age. We didn't even go to school the day the sirens started going off, we were holed up at my Grandma's place already, so we weren't rushed out of school when the water started coming over/through the dikes. Most of our family's belongings were already stashed in my Grandma's garage and anywhere else we could find to fit stuff in her building.
My brother and I were sheltered from a lot of the chaos that ensued in the following days, not having to feel the panic of our neighborhood being evacuated. Others weren't so lucky, being rushed out of their homes and neighborhoods on little to no notice, suffering thousands and thousands of dollars in flood damage to their houses and losing nearly everything they had. Our family lucked into a hotel room in Mayville when we decided even Grandma's place might be in danger and the whole town was emptying out, again distancing ourselves from the citywide damage and fires that would soon crop up.
But every family's experience was different and is filled with different memories. Everybody suffered and recovered in different ways, just trying to live life as normally as they could given the situation, and the experience no doubt affected how all of us would grow up. I think this anniversary is sad, looking back on the buildings, neighborhoods and communities that were destroyed and the lives that it changed, but it's also a happy anniversary, seeing what Grand Forks has become in spite of all its hardships, and the ways that we as individuals grew after the flood.
To commemorate the big flood ten years ago, here are a few of my personal memories and the way they affected me (any fellow flood victims reading, feel free to share your own memories in the comments below if you'd like):
Posted by Janna Banana at 11:00 AM 0 comments
Tags: 1997, flood, Grand Forks, memories, natural disaster
Who knew Knut, the world's most adorable polar bear, had his own blog? It's got lots of cool videos and the roughly translated German is still adorable in that clearly written by a grown-up human in the first person voice of a cute animal kind of way (German untranslated version here). I learned from this blog that Knut got to meet Leonardo DiCaprio and was photographed by Annie Leibovitz for this month's Vanity Fair (final product photoshopped together, sadly). Ridiculous.
I haven't decided if it's gross or awesome or genius, but it's above all one of the weirdest things I've seen in a while - The Compubeaver (found via BoingBoing). Be sure to click 'Process' for great photos.
I like health food. I love Star Wars. I also love puppets, especially when they're made of vegetables.
Posted by Janna Banana at 11:18 PM 0 comments
Tags: food, health food, organic, puppets, sci fi, star wars, video
Please direct yourself over to this blog hosted by Elizabeth, where she can discuss things like politics ten times better than I ever will!
Pete makes his web video debut in these videos where he chases the noisy plastic ball around.
Video 1:
Video 2:
Getting into disputes about what is or isn't racist and when someone should or shouldn't be punished for said racism isn't really my thing so I've intentionally avoided discussing the recent Don Imus debacle.
But I think MSNBC is doing the right thing in dropping his radio show simulcast from their morning lineup. And not just because I generally loathe shock jocks and always prefer CNN over MSNBC for my breakfast-time news updates. Rather MSNBC is removing itself from this mess they were inadvertantly drug into. Plenty of pundits and even Barack Obama (today on ABC NewsNow) aren't necessarily blaming NBC, but certainly directing some of their anger towards the Universal-owned news network and looking to MSNBC to fire him.
What so many people are overlooking is the fact that MSNBC has little control over Imus' daily content; although run out of a studio at MSNBC's N.J. headquarters, the show is produced by WFAN, a radio outlet owned by CBS. MSNBC simply airs the video version of the morning broadcast on their channel. It's yet to be seen how many radio stations drop Imus' syndicated version or what WFAN ends up doing with him (although the amount of money they'll lose in licensing fees when NBC quits paying them is probably a good indicator of things to come). But rather than try to explain why they're not really responsible for Imus' bad behavior, MSNBC took the easier and probably most universally-appealing route and just kicked him to the curb.
This all comes on the heels of another morning cable news shakeup - CNN's decision to replace its pair of O'Brien's. (Side note: I have to admit I've been kind of a fan of Soledad O'Brien forever, since she was a correspondent on the discovery channel when I was a kid, and I've loved watching her move up the broadcast ladder up to the Today Show and CNN, I'm very interested to see where she ends up in the future) But MSNBC could take advantage of the changes going on to revamp their AM lineup and reclaim some new viewers from among the disgruntled O'Brien fans and all the new Imus haters out there.
Just wanted to share the linkage with several of my friends who've thrown me random links in their also little-read blogs. That would be Jason and Steve, who both mentioned me in the first posts of their brand spankin-new blogs. Others still are included on the sidebar, but they get no love til they mention me. Or Pete.
To make a long story short, the people who own Felix the Cat are suing the creators of the Kit-Cat clock, those cute black cat clocks with the tail that wags with every tick-tock (I want this one). Some people would be surprised to learn that the iconic timekeeping kitties are not actually representative of classic toon star Felix.
Okay "Some people" is me, and as a toonhead I'm a little ashamed to admit that I never separated the two. But can you blame me? They look so much alike, it's no wonder the clock makers are being sued for misappropriating the iconic cat's likeness for financial gain. And not just some financial gain, buckets upon buckets of financial gain. Which is obviously the only reason this lawsuit is finally happening, a mere 70 years after the first Kit Kat clock was made - money.
If this lawsuit were based purely on the principle of protecting Felix's good name and reputation or the creative work of the animators, they'd also be suing Disney, home of Julius (seen holding the cake), a feature player in a series of theatrical shorts in the 20's, not long after Felix's illustrious (pun intended) debut. But Julius didn't grow into a cash cow (cash cat?) that reportedly sold a piece of merchandise once every three minutes for seven decades. Then again, Julius and Felix most likely inspired the design of future Disney headliner Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, who eventually developed into that other animation superstar. Basically, everybody was "inspired" by everybody else back then, and the lovable, round-headed, black-and-white, easy-to-draw anthropomorphized cartoon was the trend.
But ultimately I think Felix's production company and the Kit-Cat Clock company should put aside their differences and unite against the real culprit: this cute li'l feller. That's right, Kit-Cat lookalike URL kitkat.com takes you right to Purina's UK website starring a black-and-white spokescat by the name of ... Felix.
Posted by Janna Banana at 3:51 AM 2 comments
Tags: advertising, comedy, katherine heigl, movies, seth rogen, steve carell
Don't laugh at me just because it 2:30 a.m. and I'm watching Napoleon Dynamite in Spanish...
This could just be because my Spanish skills are on par with those of a 3-year-old, but for a movie that's not all that funny to begin with until you start repeating lines from it over and over with your friends, it's even less funny in Spanish. I think it's because the actor who dubbed all of Jon Heder's lines comes nowhere near that signature Napoleon Dynamite delivery. He's just not the same without it. Maybe it's because Spanish seems to come off as so quickly spoken...Maybe people who actually talk and act like that are a purely American phenomenon? I guess I wouldn't know what the Central or South American equivalent of a Napoleon-like character would act like.
Understandably, Latino activist groups are already bashing Ken Burns' latest PBS effort, "The War." In the film, Burns (yes, for you iMovie lovers, that's the namesake of the "Ken Burns Effect" for using photos in your home-made videos) creates a sort of oral history of World War II through interviews with veterans and family and community members in a few selected American towns. What the activists are saying is that even though Japanese-Americans and African-Americans get their stories told in the film, there's not a single representation of the Latino-American war experience.
As I said before, I totally understand where the people in these groups are coming from, but demands that the film be updated to include Latino stories before its September premiere are unreasonable. The film has been in the works for six years, and Burns and co. would be hard-pressed to find a way to integrate new interviews in only six months, and still keep them relevant to the towns chosen for the film. What's more, the 14-hour documentary series never claimed to be all-inclusive (no matter how much Burns wishes his labor of love would become the American WWII documentary). From the segments of the series I've seen, the show looks great - emotional, accurate, very well-made - but it does limit itself to select communities, and even 14 hours of a broader documentary couldn't cover every aspect of WWII.
Surely Latinos aren't the only minorities left out of the series. But having grown into such a dominant minority (oxymoron?) in the United States in decades since, Latino activist groups should give up on dreams of Burns magically transforming his nearly-complete documentary. Just by voicing their complaints, this cause has gotten plenty of attention in the mainstream press and brought their story to the forefront. They should follow the lead of oral history projects already in-progress, take advantage of all the newfound interest, and produce a great, high-profile documentary of their own in hopes of adding it to the high school history class video canon.
Posted by Janna Banana at 6:27 PM 0 comments
Tags: documentary, film, History, Ken Burns, Latino, PBS, World War II, WWII
Johnny Hart, creator of the comic strip, B.C., died today. He did a great job of combining two of my favorite comedic conventions, social commentary and, as seen above, just plain corniness.
Check out these ridiculous Scrabble-inspired sofas, shaped like tile trays, complete with letter tile cushions. You can rearrange them to spell whatever you want.
Hilarious? Tragic? Finally a reason for me to say "You go, Geraldo!"? I Post, You Decide.
Link
Posted by Janna Banana at 6:58 PM 1 comments
Tags: fox, geraldo, immigration, media, news, o'reilly, video
So along with my (most likely fruitless) quest to become an internet celebrity, I figured this blog would be a great way to promote some friends of mine also trying to achieve worldwide(web) fame and notoriety.
Like, the star of this cinematic gem:
(And don't forget the sequel!)
Or "DJ Spraxx0," creator of the highly annoying yet highly addicting song heard here:
It's apparently already a favorite among fans of semi-obscure children's anime.
Oh, and I have no idea who this guy is but I think he is deserving of some web face time:
Now please, proliferate these to the masses, we are all overdue for our fifteen minutes!
Welcome to the first installment to "Pete's Bananas," named for Pete and, well, bananas. Feel free to interpret the name any way you like. Personally, I imagine there is a sidewalk fruit stand somewhere named "Pete's Bananas."
But stay tuned as I provide commentary on various forms of media (mostly news and television), help spread silly photos and videos through the internets, and provide various other notes and rants, all for my own satisfaction.