Media
The Gigantic Foreclosure
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 03/24/2008 - 14:59It seems like an unlikely movie plot. A Wall Street technology executive, who started on Wall Street writing programs to analyze mortgage backed securities, moves to the suburbs and buys a unique hundred-year-old home. After living there for a few years, his marriage falls apart. His career takes a nasty turn, and he struggles to find a new job on the Street. He remarries and spends his time writing and getting involved with politics. He names his blog after the unique house. He gets credentialed as one of the first bloggers at the 2004 Democratic National Convention. He writes a novel for National Novel Writing Month, and as the housing market collapses, he is forced to sell his house in a foreclosure auction.
As he tries to straighten out his financial woes, he gets a call from a movie scout that would like to use the house for a romantic comedy. There isn’t a lot of money in the deal, not enough to bail him out. They want to film just days before the foreclosure auction.
At this point, suggestions on the way the story plays out with the filming and the auction and any humorous twists would be appreciated. I would much rather see this play out as a romantic comedy closer to the style of Woody Allen than a tragicomedy in the style of Zola. However, I can wait. The filming is scheduled for Wednesday and the auction is scheduled for Saturday.
You see, while this sounds like a very unlikely movie plot, it is the current real life twists and turns of my current life.
The movie turns out to be Gigantic, “A comedy centered around a mattress salesman and the young woman whom he meets at his store.” It stars Zooey Deschanel and Paul Dano, with John Goodman, Jane Alexander, Edward Asner and others. One article says that Dano plays “Brian, a depressed mattress salesman whose quest to adopt a Chinese baby is sidetracked when he falls for Happy (Deschanel)”. Another article reports, “Asner will play Dano's pot-smoking, gangsta rap-loving father, and Alexander plays his mother. Goodman plays Deschanel's brilliant but domineering father.”
As best as I can tell, there is a family reunion, which will be filmed at Orient Lodge. The family is going hunting, or something like that. One person said that family is going mushroom hunting together and everyone takes magic mushrooms before hand.
So, if everything goes fine, they will finish filming at the house a couple days before the foreclosure auction. I have no idea what will happen at the foreclosure auction. It would be great if things work out in such a way that covers a large portion of the outstanding debt, but we shall see.
So, Gigantic sounds like a fun movie. The plot might seem a little unlikely, but it probably seems more likely than the plot of my life and we shall see how the two plots intermingle.
Jim Hightower Addresses Common Cause Supporters
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 03/15/2008 - 10:04I write about a lot of different things on my blog, psychology, politics, current events, technology, social networks, energy, the environment, media reform, education, global warming, and local activism; the list seems endless. So, it is great when I attend an event that provides an opportunity to tie many of these themes together, and the reception for Jim Hightower as he travels around the country promoting his new book, Swimming Against the Current provides a great opportunity.
We live in a society that worships the individual. It is part of the very fiber of our national character. Yet over the years, our schools, our media, our politicians have fought hard to thwart a key aspect of our individualism, the ability and willingness to question authority. Be a good individual, they tell us, as long as you go along with the flow, and don’t question our authority.
It starts in our schools. If you send out some emails urging parents to call up the school and ask the administration to justify a recent decision, it will get them upset. If you go home and write about it on a blog, call the upset administrators some choice words, and encourage other people to get them even more upset by questioning their authority, they will come down hard on you. They won’t challenge you on being a true American, showing your independence and questioning authority, they’ll attack you for doing something offensive, using choice words on your blog. They might not let you run again for class office, and you could end up with a freedom of speech case in the Federal courts.
If you try to run for office, the well moneyed donors will work hard to make sure that campaigns are not a level playing field. They’ll try to rig the system so that you need lots of money to run; money that comes from rich successful businessmen, and not from the public as a whole, because we all know that only rich successful businessmen know how to run a country. At least that’s what they’ll use the large corporately owned media outlets to try and convince us.
Jim Hightower has a different message. His book urges you to “question authority, trust your values, seek alternatives, break away, stand up for your beliefs, and swim against the current!” He provides examples of this. Last night, he talked about a single mother, working as a waitress in Maine. Because Maine has passed public financing of elections, this single mother has managed to run, and get elected to the Maine state legislature.
Personally, I think a woman who has to struggle to make ends meet might be much more effective at coming up with a budget, personally, and statewide than a rich successful businessman with plenty of disposable income. I think a woman who has to juggle work schedules with the schedules of her children as they try to get a quality education might be much more effective than a rich successful businessman whose schedule is carefully arranged for him in helping the state address issues of economic development, education and the environment.
Mr. Hightower talked about how her story is not an isolated story, it is the story of so many Americans who are trying to swim upstream. The corporate media doesn’t spend a lot of time talking about this; that might encourage more people to question authority. Yet the Internet is changing this. We can start sharing our stories. Jim Hightower is using the Internet to help this. On his website, he has a Storytelling Contest. It reminds me of the storytelling contests that are another piece of the fabric of American life. We’ve always told our stories around campfires, at bars, or gathered with friends in our living rooms. Now, we can use YouTube to share those stories, and the best stories will win “an autographed copy of Swim Against the Current and a gift certificate to their local greenmarket or Mom-n-Pop store.”
You see, Jim Hightower not only writes about the importance of individuals reaching out to other individuals and supporting them at locally owned stores, breweries and beyond, he lives and breathes it. Kim and I were fortunate enough to take him out for dinner after the reception. The waitress came around and took our drink orders. He asked what they had for a good local beer, and the waitress apologized that they didn’t have any local beers and he told her they really ought to. He talked with us about a great local beer he had had the other night. We talked about how local beers in reusable bottles are one of the most ‘green’ beers, or ‘low carbon’ beers you’ll ever find. It had been a long day, and Kim didn’t ask the waitress if she would be interested in running for State Representative.
What does all of this have to do with getting out of the hand basket? Well, Jim spoke about a bumper sticker he sees on beat up old pickup trucks in Austin, Texas. It says, “Where am I going, and why am I in this hand basket?” Well, anyone who has looked at the economy lately as well as what is going on internationally can probably make a good guess at where we are going. It seems like the only way to get out of the hand basket is to band together with people in groups like Common Cause, question authority, tell our stories, and have a good local beer. The only way to get out of the hand basket, is to swim up stream.
Even though there wasn’t a good local beer at the family owned restaurant we ate at with Jim Hightower, Kim and I were very fortunate to get a chance to spend some time with him, and I hope all of you get a similar chance as he travels around the country promoting both his latest book and great groups like Common Cause.
Modeling Responsible Online Speech
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 03/11/2008 - 11:27How do we deal with people we disagree with online, with people who say something offensive, or possibly damaging? I’ve been spending a lot of time thinking and writing about this issue recently.
The New York Times has an article about Paul Tilley, the creative director of advertising firm, DDB Chicago. He had received anonymous harsh criticism on two advertising blogs. To what extent are the people who posted those comments responsible? To what extent are the moderators of the blog responsible for not doing better moderation? To what extent are the companies responsible for hosting these blogs responsible? What is the appropriate way of dealing with these sorts of comments?
I’ve spent a lot of time arguing this with various friends online. I worry about companies and schools restricting the free expression of ideas. Yet I also believe that people need to learn civility in their online writing. The same question applies to the Avery Doninger case. What is the best way, the right way, to help people like Avery learn to be more civil in their blog posts?
Recently, Chris Gingrich wrote a harsh blog post about how the Doningers have handled this. It was based on very incomplete information from newspaper articles. I wrote a comment addressing some of the misconceptions he had about the case and challenged him on the way he presented some of his arguments. On Sunday, he removed the original post and put up this post.
A commenter pointed out that the news articles I had based my post on left out some important facts. And, in a number of areas, he was right. Worse, my tone was harsh and unfair.
He then explores many important points. Should this be viewed as a censorship case? How do we help people to become more ‘moral’? What can we do as parents, people of faith, as members of our communities? How does it apply to specific issues in his community?
I would like to suggest that his response is part of the answer. Adults need to model constructive, wise and caring ways to dealing with issues in our community. Mr. Gingrich has done exactly that. He is strong enough to admit when he is wrong and to look for better solutions. If Superintendent Schwartz and Principal Niehoff had done this in the first place in the Doninger case, it would not be in court. It would not be a censorship case. Instead, it could have been a case study in how better to deal with conflict in an era when people can easily express their feelings online.
Mr. Gingrich writes,
My frustration with such issues stems from recent efforts to try to organize volunteers to help out in a local school where discipline is a major problem (think knives, gang assualts, arrests, threats against staff and epidemic rudeness and disrespect). I am hoping to start up after school programs and eventually mentoring type programs.
Avery’s difficulties started when she tried to organize citizens of her community to address one of her concerns. Whether or not bands should get to play in a new auditorium is not as significant a problem as gang assaults in schools, yet the aspect of organizing volunteers is the same.
So, let me propose a radical idea. Mr. Gingrich, reach out to the kids that bring knives to school. Get them to deal with their anger and frustration by using words like “douche bag” on blogs instead of knives in schools. Over time, you can get them to use more civil words and become more effective in dealing with their anger and frustration.
Chris Gingrich has modeled constructive online behavior in his blog. I believe that Avery has already learned from her mother how to be more constructive in her speech online. I do not believe that Schwartz or Niehoff have yet learned how to deal constrively with online speech, and it sounds like there are a lot of youth in Mr. Gingrich’s community that could learn similar lessons. Let’s all try to learn from him.
Mixed Media
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 03/07/2008 - 17:50My queue of unread emails has expanded significantly again. There is so much to read. There is so much going on in Second Life. I have articles and emails to write. Yet it is also college break and the girls have been around. I drove Miranda to the train station this morning. She is spending some time with some friends before heading back to school. I asked my Mairead what some good father daughter time might be, and she suggested visiting a bookstore. It led to a good mixed media day.
The first store we stopped at is part of a large national chain, yet there is a foreign language section with ties to Yale and some great books. Mairead stopped there while I went and checked out some other books. I’ve been thinking of getting The Writer’s Market to see if I can find a publisher for my novel, and perhaps some other good writing gigs. Miranda is also interested in this, since she has written one novel and has some others in the works. However, I just couldn’t see spending $50 on the 2008 deluxe edition of The Writer’s Market.
When Mairead had selected her books, we headed off to another bookstore. This one was a small local bookstore. It was full of books from ancient literature to new media and from Marxist to anarcho-capitalist theories. As I looked at the new media books, I was struck by how old they seemed. I found it interesting to look at what they had to say, as I thought of what was piling up on my hard drive. At one point, Mairead asked me if I remembered who wrote Interview with the Vampire. We both remembered that the author’s first name was Anne, but we couldn’t think of the last name. If I were sitting at home, I could googled it and had the answer in a moment. As it was, the quickest way of finding out was to call Kim, who quickly reminded us that it was Anne Rice.
Cellphones and Google have changed the way we search for information. The Internet has changed our view of what is timely. This changes what you can find on the shelves of the large bookstore chains. However, there is still something very special about going to a small local bookstore, with a great collection of obscure books. Father and daughter, old media and new.
Questioning CNN's Patriotism
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 02/26/2008 - 15:14During the 2004 Republican National Convention, MSNBC had a poll asking if Rudy Giuliani’s speech reassured you or moved you to support President Bush, as if those were the only two choices. In response, I created this poll.
Recently, CNN took a page from this playbook and had a poll questioning Sen. Barack Obama’s patriotism. It seems like my poll questioning whether MSNBC has any journalistic integrity left could equally apply to CNN. Perhaps we should be asking if Wolf Blitzer has stopped beating his secret lover or if he is now, or ever has been, a member of the Communist party.