Archive for December 14th, 2010

December 14th, 2010

Book Review: The Climate War

by Andrew

To call The Climate War “a riveting tale,” as the cover quotes Bill Clinton as saying, would be an understatement. There have been many books written about current events in the past few years that deserve a large amount of praise, but Eric Pooley’s is the first to talk about what history will remember as the defining issue of our time: the fight to begin dealing with climate change.

In just under 500 pages, Pooley lays out in captivating detail the struggle over the past few years to pass a cap and trade bill in the United States Congress. He explains back stories, introduces us to unsung heroes whose names will never appear in the media, and hammers home, time and again, how difficult a problem our country is facing.

The subtitle of the book is telling: True Believers, Power Brokers, and the Fight to Save the Earth. This is not an unbiased book. That being said, readers will be surprised by the villains: science deniers and energy executives take a back seat to what Pooley sees as the destructive behavior of the environmentalist movement, from the Sierra Club leftward. There are many heroes in this book, but the two that stand out are Fred Krupp, President of the Environmental Defense Fund, and Jim Rogers, CEO of Duke Energy, one of the largest utility companies in the country.

These two men, along with many more individuals, environmental groups, and yes even corporations than can be named, fought side by side to pass a cap and trade bill through Congress. And they almost succeeded. read more »

December 14th, 2010

December 14, 2010 City Council Meeting

by DickH

I found myself in front of the TV at 6:30 pm and decided to watch the city council meeting. Here’s what I witnessed:

Councilor Caulfield moved to suspend the rules to discuss the city’s response to Sunday’s ice storm. It was a civil discussion with a lot of detail about strategies for treating snow and ice on the road. City Manager Lynch began by saying you can always improve your performance and he hoped that would be the case with this storm. He did point out that Lowell was not alone in sustaining icy roads and that pretty much every community in the region deployed equipment at the same time as Lowell. He also said that a truck can only sand one street at a time while the ice hits every street at the same time.

The council also voted to send the request to set the voting age in municipal elections to seventeen. Approximately a dozen young people spoke in favor of it and the council passed the matter on a roll call vote without any discussion. The vote was seven in favor, one opposed (Caulfield) and one absent (Broderick).

Chair of the Public Safety Subcommittee, Councilor Caulfield, gave a report on a subcommittee meeting from earlier this evening regarding safety and orderliness in the Pollard Memorial Library. The council learned that the library already employs a security guard who is on duty from 5 pm until 9 pm. The subcommittee found that most of the problems occur at 2:15 pm when school lets out and so recommended that the hours of the security guard be shifted to a 2:15 pm to 6:15 pm shift to cover the time the guard is most needed. Manager Lynch reminds councilors that the security guard was hired and his hours were set three years ago in response to concerns raised by the same employees, concerns that are also the subject of “collective bargaining” activities (by which I assume he means union grievances). Councilor Martin cautions the council not to circumvent the chain of command by reacting to complaints received directly from employees.

After a quick motion about bedbugs, Mayor Milinazzo reminded everyone that this was the last meeting of 2010 because of the upcoming holidays. He thanked his colleagues for a successful year which, he pointed out, was the mid-point of this council term. The meeting ended at 8:25 pm.

December 14th, 2010

Immaculate Conception Church

by DickH

Tony Sampas photographs the Immaculate Conception Church in Lowell by night

December 14th, 2010

Six Golden Globe Nominations for “The Fighter”

by Marie

 

Actresses Amy Adams and Melissa Leo attend the Cinema Society & Men’s Health screening of “The Fighter” To Benefit The Cinema School at SVA Theater.

Made-in Lowell movie “The Fighter” garnered six Golden Globe nominations as announced this morning.  The awards to be presented on January 17 are often the precursor to the Oscar winners.

  • Best Picture – The Fighter
  • Best Director – David O. Russell
  • Best Lead Actor – Mark Wahlberg
  • Best Supporting Actor – Christian Bale
  • Best Supporting Actress – Melissa Leo and Amy Adams

See the full list of Golden Globe nominees here.

December 14th, 2010

Jeopardy’s Lastest Challenge

by Marie

 Scene from “Desk Set” -  Spencer Tracy/ Katherine Hepburn movie from 1957.

As an almost daily viewer of the iconic game show “Jeopardy” – I have mixed feelings about the lastest announcement of  upcoming contestants. According to an Associated Press story, two of the best and  most successful past champions – Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter - will play two games against “Watson” – a computer program developed by IBM’s artificial intelligence.

The game show “Jeopardy!” will pit man versus machine this winter in a competition that will show how successful scientists are in creating a computer that can mimic human intelligence.

Two of the venerable game show’s most successful champions – Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter – will play two games against “Watson,” a computer program developed by IBM’s artificial intelligence team. The matches will be spread over three days that will air Feb. 14-16, the game show said on Tuesday.

The match-up reminds me of the old Spencer Tracy-Katherine Hepburn movie “Desk Set” where a group of researchers at the “Federal Broadcasting Network” led by Bunny  Watson (interesting name coincidence) played by  Hepburn fear that the computer EMERAC (Emmy) will replace them. The plot thickens when EMERAC mistakenly sends everyone a “pink slip.” It’s a classic movie set at Christmastime that Tracy/Hepburn fans love! You should check it out.

Read the full AP article on the Jeopardy challenge here.

December 14th, 2010

Wahlberg and Bale from “The Fighter” on SI Cover

by Marie

  Marl Walhberg and Christian Bale on Sports Illustrated Cover

From People Magazine about “actors as fighters” from Lowell-made movie “The Fighter” on the cover of  Sports Illustrated :

Mark Wahlberg not only received glowing reviews for his undertstated performance as the real-life junior welterweight Mickey Ward in The Fighter, but he unexpectedly landed a national magazine cover.

Sports Illustrated features the actor, 39, stripped down to fighter gear, and lauds the film as the “Best Sports Movie of the Decade.” This also marks one of the rare times in the 56-year history of the publication (which, like PEOPLE. is part of Time Inc.) that a non-athlete has graced the cover.

Read the full article here.

December 14th, 2010

No Room for Mass Film Office Chief

by Marie

Come January, 2011 with a reorganization  of the Massachusetts Film Office – Executive Director Nick Paleologos will be out of a job. In the new year, the state’s film office will be administered through the  state Office of Travel and Tourism. As noted in the Globe earlier this month - the office of Housing and Economic Development (EOHED) Secretary Greg Bialecki – confirmed that “at this time, we have elected not to offer  Nick Paleologos a position.”

An editorial in today’s Globe questions the wisdom of letting Paleologos go -

THE FALL movie season has been a triumph for Massachusetts. That’s why it’s surprising, and almost inexplicable, that the Patrick administration would choose this moment to remove the hard-working head of the film office, Nick Paleologos.

Noting the many recent movies shot on location here in the Commonwealth, the editorial lauds Paleologos – a movie producer himself - for his valuable role in making the case to producers about the available tax credits and encouraging them to come to Massachusetts.  

Come Oscar time, Bay State residents will watch nominations handed out to films as varied as “The Social Network,’’ set in the academic world of Cambridge; “The Town,’’ about Charlestown; “The Fighter,’’ depicting the rise of Lowell’s “Irish’’ Micky Ward; and perhaps also the forthcoming “The Company Men,’’ about a Boston financial-services firm. The staggering range of stories shows how important the commercial arts can be to promoting local history and identity. The benefits to Massachusetts are immense.

The editorial wonders if  Paleologos’  successful lobbying of the Legislature against capping the tax credits  is at the root of his dismissal.

It’s out of character for Patrick to remove a successful official over a perceived lack of loyalty. The governor should be a big enough figure to tolerate underlings who are outspoken advocates for their work. Patrick’s perceived magnanimity was, after all, a prime reason for his reelection. He should find a way to retain Paleologos — and keep the film office working at top capacity.

Read the full Globe editorial here.

 

December 14th, 2010

Shards of the Season by Jack Neary

by Tony

The entry below is being cross posted from Jack Neary’s own blog, Shards. Check it out too.

Songs of the Season I will listen to until they’re over, regardless of whether I am parked in front of my house and it’s freezing:

White Christmas – Bing Crosby
Jingle Bell Rock – Bobby Helms
Rockin’ Around The Christmas Tree – Brenda Lee
A Holly Jolly Christmas – Burl Ives
Do You Hear What I Hear – Bing Crosby
The Little Drummer Boy – Harry Simeone Chorale
O Holy Night – Andy Williams
Mele Kalikimaka – Crosby and the Andrews Sisters

And that’s it. I did not forget Nat Cole’s The Christmas Song. It’s beautiful, but it won’t stop me from turning off the ignition.

—–

And speaking of Do You Hear What I Hear – how come that’s the title of the song? It’s not the tag of the first stanza of the song. That’s Do You See What I See. It’s not the tag of the final stanza of the song. That’s Do You Know What I Know. It’s not repeated any more often than any other Do You Whatever What I Whatever in the song. Who decided Do You Hear What I Hear was going to be the title? Should I worry about this? Should you?

—–

And here’s the deal about The Little Drummer Boy. First of all, with the Harry Simeone version available, there was really no need for anybody else to record the song. However, some people did. Some people keep doing it. Hey–that’s their right. Be aware, though, you people who make up your mind to sing this song, that you damn well better know how to Parump A Bump Bum. There are a number of versions out there in which the Parump A Bump Bum is atrocious. Very few humans can pull off the Parump a Bump Bum required to make this song work. I think Crosby comes close in the version of The Peace Carol/Little Drummer Boy he sang with David Bowie on that Christmas TV Special he filmed in England about five minutes before he died. I think he lucked into a correct reading of Parump a Bump Bum because he was so embarrassed singing the song with David Bowie that he kind of turned his brain off and pretty much threw away the phrase, making it strangely effective. Truth be told, though, damn few singers can execute the phrase properly. My recommendation: leave the song alone. There’s a perfect version out there already. read more »

December 14th, 2010

Plus ca change, plus c’est la meme chose

by PaulM

Lowell Gallery owner and all around good guy Guy Lefebvre sent me this nugget from an old Lowell newspaper. Some of the party platform planks have flopped and flipped through the years, but the rhetoric remains modern. This is from 1834, when Lowell was still a town, two years before incorporating as a city. In a note to me, Guy wrote, “I guess we aren’t progressing as fast as we think.”—PM

Lowell Mercury, Lowell, Mass., Friday, Feb. 21, 1834, Vol. 5, Number 8

“The most unprincipled and reckless party in the country is the democracy, so called of New England. Not that the members are bad men or unprofitable citizens, but that the leaders are destitute, either of true political science, or of common honesty, while they have sufficient cunning to win approbation and support from a respectable portion of the people, whose trust is abused and whose honest purpose is misled.

“It is by pretending great friendship and regard for the poor, for the laborers, for the producers, that these leaders cajole the public. Little do they care or say about the support of morals, the spread of intelligence, the maintenance of republican liberty, the preservation of our institutions in their purity, and of our nation in its strength and happiness. ‘Down With the Aristocracy’ is the watchword, and the whole argument is in the humble perverted declaration, “We are the friends of the poor,” uttered by hypocrisy, and enforced by falsehood.”

Note:

Here’s what Wikipedia says about the origins of the Democratic Party:

The modern Democratic Party was formed in the 1830s from factions of the Democratic-Republican Party, which had largely collapsed by 1824. It was rebuilt by Andrew Jackson of Tennessee in alliance with his top supporter in the North, Martin Van Buren. [Jackson was president from 1829 to 1837.] The spirit of Jacksonian Democracy animated the party from the early 1830s to the 1850s, shaping the Second Party System, with the Whig Party the main opposition. After the disappearance of the Federalists after 1815, and the Era of Good Feelings (1816–24), there was a hiatus of weakly organized personal factions until about 1828-32, when the modern Democratic Party emerged along with its rival the new Whig Party. The new Democratic Party became a coalition of farmers, city-dwelling laborers, and Irish Catholics. It was weakest in New England, but strong everywhere else and won most national elections thanks to strength in New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia (by far, the most populous states at the time), and the frontier. Democrats opposed elites and aristocrats, the Bank of the United States, and the whiggish modernizing programs that would build up industry at the expense of the yeoman or independent small farmer.

From 1828 to 1848, banking and tariffs were the central domestic policy issues. Democrats strongly favored expansion to new farm lands, as typified by their expulsion of eastern American Indians and acquisition of vast amounts of new land in the West after 1846. The party favored the War with Mexico and opposed anti-immigrant nativism. Both Democrats and Whigs were divided on the issue of slavery. In the 1830s, the Locofocos in New York City were radically democratic, anti-monopoly, and were proponents of hard money and free trade.[3][4] Their chief spokesman was William Leggett. At this time labor unions were few; some were loosely affiliated with the party.