Ever since (e:dragonlady7) joined the Rollergirls she's been going to practice early every Sunday morning ... giving me a chance to sleep in, take my time waking up, and cook up something nice for when she comes home, bruised and exhausted. I'm no chef, but cooking is one of my favorite hobbies, and it provides a nice, relaxing way to start my Sabbath. Today I made a small frittata with bacon, green peppers, green onions, and Swiss cheese; the store-brand coffee was enhanced with a dash each of amaretto and locally-produced [Grimsby, ON] Oh Canada maple liqueur . Yum.
Public Service Announcement:
It's almost that time again where we tell our elected representatives what we think of them, and there are a number of very important federal and state offices up for election this year. The League of Women Voters has put together an excellent guide that should be required reading as far as I am concerned. Please read it so that you know what the Hell is going on before you get in the booth next Tuesday.
Positions up for election:
US Senator, Hillary Rodham Clinton (D) incumbent
NY Governor, George Pataki (R) retiring
(NY Lt Governor, Mary Donohue (R) retiring)
NY Attorney General, Eliot Spitzer (D) retiring
NY Comptroller, Alan Hevesi (D) incumbent
All three House of Representatives seats are up for election this year as well.
26th District (Amherst and points east), Thomas Reynolds (R) incumbent
27th District (West Side, Lackawanna, and points south), Brian Higgins (D) incumbent
28th District (East Side, Tonawanda, and points north), Louise Slaughter (D) incumbent
-- My Opinion --
I think everyone is entitled to their opinion, regardless of how wrong it may be, and we pay our politicians to represent our opinions. If I disagree with a politician because I disagree with his constituency, well ... for better or worse, at least he's doing his job. Lately, though, it seems that our representatives are more interested in promoting the soap opera of politics [and at a very bad time, mind you] than in, you know, running the country. If the country's in the shitter and you want to know who's responsible, I'll give you a hint - it's not the Republicans or the Democrats at fault - it's the incumbents.
This year, I think a simple vote of no confidence would suffice.
- Z
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New journal music: Rasputina, 'The Mayor,' from 'Frustration Plantation.' gather:0607319001162147286
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10/29/2006 13:43 #37388
sunday morning + psaCategory: politics
10/26/2006 20:00 #37387
productivity is downCategory: work
because my laptop is in the shop. See, the thermostat is mounted to the heat sink and wired to the power management unit. When the heat sink expands, the thermostat shifts just so and disconnects from the PMU. The PMU assumes catastrophic failure and cuts the power. It's an academically-amusing butterfly effect kind of deal, but I'm not really amused anymore and I kind of want my computer back.
I've also found myself near the center of a number of poorly-conceived Vision of the Future meetings. Normally I dig Vision of the Future meetings, since it's a chance for Management to give us underlings direction and motivation. The focus of the meetings is We Need a Better Website, which I don't disagree with. Our online readership is, frankly, abysmal. From where I sit, the largest obstacle we're facing is that the website we have is just about as much [if not slightly more] than our current staff and organization can handle. If we want more, we need more staff and better organization.
I think we have two options. The first is that we can continue doing what we're doing. The website exists mostly as a byproduct of our daily operations, and as such, it really only needs a one-person web department and a small amount of cooperation from other departments. It is cheap and functional, and we're not going to go out of business if we keep it the way it is. If this is what we decide, I would only wish that we'd stop pretending small usability improvements and devastatingly grandiose gimmicks would magically net us a million hits a month.
The only other option I see is to 'go daily' online. We have 19 articles this week, and no new content until next Thursday. A certain competitor has 16 new articles today and more on the way tomorrow. And before you say I'm crazy to insist on nothing short of total organizational overhaul - Editorial is behind me on this one 100%.
So we seem to be having a meeting every week now. For fifteen minutes every Thursday afternoon, we have a premeeting meeting wherein we get our stories straight about what we're doing to follow up on miscellaneous ineffictive ideas. Then we sit at a table for an hour while the Boss shows us some keen websites he found, with the implication that we should be more like them [here is a true, honest-to-God example; I wish I were making this up]. Then there's a tense fifteen minutes where we try to regroup in a secure location [which is difficult to do in a blind rage] and spend fifteen minutes calming down by deciding what we're actually going to do before the next meeting.
It's fucking ridiculous, really, that we have to secretly plot how to be productive and organizationally successful.
- Z
I've also found myself near the center of a number of poorly-conceived Vision of the Future meetings. Normally I dig Vision of the Future meetings, since it's a chance for Management to give us underlings direction and motivation. The focus of the meetings is We Need a Better Website, which I don't disagree with. Our online readership is, frankly, abysmal. From where I sit, the largest obstacle we're facing is that the website we have is just about as much [if not slightly more] than our current staff and organization can handle. If we want more, we need more staff and better organization.
I think we have two options. The first is that we can continue doing what we're doing. The website exists mostly as a byproduct of our daily operations, and as such, it really only needs a one-person web department and a small amount of cooperation from other departments. It is cheap and functional, and we're not going to go out of business if we keep it the way it is. If this is what we decide, I would only wish that we'd stop pretending small usability improvements and devastatingly grandiose gimmicks would magically net us a million hits a month.
The only other option I see is to 'go daily' online. We have 19 articles this week, and no new content until next Thursday. A certain competitor has 16 new articles today and more on the way tomorrow. And before you say I'm crazy to insist on nothing short of total organizational overhaul - Editorial is behind me on this one 100%.
So we seem to be having a meeting every week now. For fifteen minutes every Thursday afternoon, we have a premeeting meeting wherein we get our stories straight about what we're doing to follow up on miscellaneous ineffictive ideas. Then we sit at a table for an hour while the Boss shows us some keen websites he found, with the implication that we should be more like them [here is a true, honest-to-God example; I wish I were making this up]. Then there's a tense fifteen minutes where we try to regroup in a secure location [which is difficult to do in a blind rage] and spend fifteen minutes calming down by deciding what we're actually going to do before the next meeting.
It's fucking ridiculous, really, that we have to secretly plot how to be productive and organizationally successful.
- Z
ih8gates - 10/29/06 22:08
I like the idea of bringing in an independent consultant. Especially if it's an efficiency consultant, who will best serve by distracting the management so the rest of us can get some work done.
I like the idea of bringing in an independent consultant. Especially if it's an efficiency consultant, who will best serve by distracting the management so the rest of us can get some work done.
jason - 10/27/06 14:10
Excellent job Z, I thoroughly enjoyed this entry!
Excellent job Z, I thoroughly enjoyed this entry!
paul - 10/26/06 21:18
On another note, sounds like you guys need to hire an independent consultant to go evaluate the situation.
On another note, sounds like you guys need to hire an independent consultant to go evaluate the situation.
paul - 10/26/06 21:12
Seems like every mac laptop I ever owned had some sort of horrible fatal flaw such as this, accept for maybe the powerbook duo which had a whopping 33mhz processor. It is the only mac laptop I still own. I am happy to say my sony vaio is still going strong after two years of daily use and abuse.
Seems like every mac laptop I ever owned had some sort of horrible fatal flaw such as this, accept for maybe the powerbook duo which had a whopping 33mhz processor. It is the only mac laptop I still own. I am happy to say my sony vaio is still going strong after two years of daily use and abuse.
10/16/2006 14:05 #37385
attn photojournalistsCategory: weather
1. (e:dragonlady7) and I are ok. Our power was out from 9pm Thursday until probably about some time this morning. We hung out with my mom on Friday and left for the Capital District Saturday after the driving ban was lifted and the Thruway reopened. We got back early this afternoon. I went directly to work; I have been informed that our power is on again at home, yays.
2. The staff photographer is putting together a photo-essay on the storm. If anyone has any good storm or aftermath photos, send them to me and I'll pass them along.
- Z
2. The staff photographer is putting together a photo-essay on the storm. If anyone has any good storm or aftermath photos, send them to me and I'll pass them along.
- Z
vycious - 10/16/06 21:55
i have many pics i took walking home from finding out there was no work at my job on main st. on friday, if you are interested. took about 70-80 pics.
i have many pics i took walking home from finding out there was no work at my job on main st. on friday, if you are interested. took about 70-80 pics.
jenks - 10/16/06 21:11
well I don't know how "good" they are, but you're welcome to mine- I can send you better copies if you want them. (they are in my post, and I linked to more, too.)
well I don't know how "good" they are, but you're welcome to mine- I can send you better copies if you want them. (they are in my post, and I linked to more, too.)
10/09/2006 20:04 #37384
my coffee is...Category: food
...what can only be described as 'mauve,' which is not the color of food. Anderson's SPoTted Cow Float - coffee, frozen custard, whipped cream, chocolate syrup - with the black raspberry flavor of the day. Mmm, tasty and disconcerting. I imagine it would be less good when Banana custard is the special.
OK, I'm going to go into milkfat shock now. Have a nice ev--
OK, I'm going to go into milkfat shock now. Have a nice ev--
joshua - 10/11/06 14:20
We got caught up in some personal stuff that Jason and I have been trying to work out. Its been pretty difficult for us lately and we aren't the type to spill too many beans.
The good news is that House Larson is relatively getting back in order... so you will definitely be seeing more of us, starting Friday.
We got caught up in some personal stuff that Jason and I have been trying to work out. Its been pretty difficult for us lately and we aren't the type to spill too many beans.
The good news is that House Larson is relatively getting back in order... so you will definitely be seeing more of us, starting Friday.
metalpeter - 10/10/06 19:08
It was really a great time. I think you might have liked the special brownies they did taste preaty dam good.
It was really a great time. I think you might have liked the special brownies they did taste preaty dam good.
jenks - 10/10/06 17:49
jason, that reminds me- where the hell were you and your bro for the PMT housewarming?!
jason, that reminds me- where the hell were you and your bro for the PMT housewarming?!
jason - 10/09/06 22:14
Are you the longhair in Dragonlady's photo? Nice to put a face to a name, considering you're one of the few peeps I haven't yet had the pleasure of meeting.
Are you the longhair in Dragonlady's photo? Nice to put a face to a name, considering you're one of the few peeps I haven't yet had the pleasure of meeting.
10/19/2006 17:48 #37386
ghost stories from the fridgeCategory: putrefaction
OK, the last time I cleaned out the fridge it was because I was moving out of my Westchester apartment in 2004, so when I finally did it again last night, after our four day power outage ... I was expecting some pretty manky shit. This is the winner.
There was a Ricotta tub in the bottom of the fridge that I didn't recognize. We often reuse containers, so it was likely to be leftovers. I opened it up, and it was kind of moldy and lumpy and stunk to high heavens. I didn't take a really close look at it, but it looked an awful lot like it used to have been Minestrone soup.
Minestrone Soup.
I can't remember the last time we had Minestrone soup. Spring? Fall?
But when I dumped it out in the toilet ...
it was Ricotta cheese.
- Z
There was a Ricotta tub in the bottom of the fridge that I didn't recognize. We often reuse containers, so it was likely to be leftovers. I opened it up, and it was kind of moldy and lumpy and stunk to high heavens. I didn't take a really close look at it, but it looked an awful lot like it used to have been Minestrone soup.
Minestrone Soup.
I can't remember the last time we had Minestrone soup. Spring? Fall?
But when I dumped it out in the toilet ...
it was Ricotta cheese.
- Z
kara - 10/20/06 11:10
We make our own yogurt. On one of the small containers we use, the top is stuck on, but it obviously let a little air into it. Now it's filled with a blue-green mass that, at some point, will take on a life of its own.
Dairy does nasty things.
We make our own yogurt. On one of the small containers we use, the top is stuck on, but it obviously let a little air into it. Now it's filled with a blue-green mass that, at some point, will take on a life of its own.
Dairy does nasty things.
zobar - 10/20/06 08:38
But what Ungodly beast could make Ricotta cheese look like Minestrone soup?!
- Z
But what Ungodly beast could make Ricotta cheese look like Minestrone soup?!
- Z
mrmike - 10/20/06 08:15
I know what you mean -- A small jar of mayonaise was packing an awful lot of attitude when I cleaned out my fridge on Sunday
I know what you mean -- A small jar of mayonaise was packing an awful lot of attitude when I cleaned out my fridge on Sunday
This is very sensible. In truth politicians that have been in office, particularly for a long time, are the ones who have the least to lose when they know that their seat is relatively safe and tend to do things contrary to the benefit of the constituency. My god, in our city we should know this all too well.
I think that all of the politicians in our locality will retain their seats. I am voting for Spitzer this time around.
Thanks so much for posting this and for providing the link to the Women's Voters site. I wasn't sure who was running in some of the less publicized races- so that's very helpful!