Julian Sanchez header image 4

photos by Lara Shipley

Entries from May 2004

In Rotation

May 20th, 2004 · Comments Off on In Rotation

Trip to Borders this week netted a bunch of albums I’d been meaning to pick up for some time but hadn’t gotten ’round to yet: Modest Mouse: Good News for People Who Love Bad News The Vines: Winning Days TV on the Radio: Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babies Franz Ferdinand: Franz Ferdinand Yeah Yeah Yeahs: […]

[Read more →]

Tags: Uncategorized

Real Love?

May 20th, 2004 · 1 Comment

When last we saw Jenny Roback Morse, she was holding forth on the link between marriage and human nature, undeterred by her complete scientific illiteracy. Now she’s produced another farrago of a piece on the subject—one of those that’s so confused in so many different ways, you barely know where to begin. The central argument […]

[Read more →]

Tags: Uncategorized

Guilt and Luck

May 20th, 2004 · Comments Off on Guilt and Luck

I’m never surprised to come across some tendentious self-congratulatory piece of the “if you’re not a liberal at 18…” variety, wherein some conservative muses on what kind of personal pathology might induce people to persist in the immature “liberal” phase past the age of reason. But it’s always a little disappointing when philosophy professors stoop […]

[Read more →]

Tags: Uncategorized

Scrabble on the Big Screen

May 18th, 2004 · Comments Off on Scrabble on the Big Screen

Caught Word Wars this weekend with the Sexy Economist™: It’s a documentary about the competitive Scrabble circuit which, like its spiritual cousin Spellbound, is much more interesting than it sounds. The film follows four stranger-than-fiction competitors: a Zen-spouting, Tai Chi practicing trifecta champ; a gangly, Maalox-quaffing nebbish from Brooklyn; a dope-smokin’ “pre-Mecca Malcolm” from Baltimore, […]

[Read more →]

Tags: Uncategorized

A Persecuted Majority

May 17th, 2004 · Comments Off on A Persecuted Majority

I’ve always found grating the claims of some pundits that Christians, a huge majority of the American population, are some sort of downtrodden, persecuted minority. Usually what’s meant is that in a pluralistic society, it’s less and less the case that one group’s religious conception is woven into the public legal structure, and that cultural […]

[Read more →]

Tags: Uncategorized

Who grapples with blogs…

May 17th, 2004 · Comments Off on Who grapples with blogs…

…should take care lest he become a blogger. I take some small satisfaction in noting that a certain Betty-Page-lookalike ex, who made a bit of fun when I started a blog back when we were dating, now has a blog of her own. It’s good, though primarily of interest to Fresnans and others on the […]

[Read more →]

Tags: Uncategorized

Taxing Patience

May 14th, 2004 · Comments Off on Taxing Patience

In the wake of Brian Doherty’s article on the tax protest movement, I’ve seen a handful of letters from folks with links to a variety of sites pimping elaborate theories showing how, if you pull a sentence here or there from a few statutes and Supreme Court opinions, you can “prove” you’re not obligated to […]

[Read more →]

Tags: Uncategorized

Of Human Bondage

May 12th, 2004 · Comments Off on Of Human Bondage

My friends occasionally (and justly) make fun of the desperate libertarian tendency to apply the l-word to any work of popular culture that shows even the most meager individualist or pro-market strand. (The protagonist bought something he wanted—a paean to the power of laissez faire! Keanu is “the one”—it’s all about the power of the […]

[Read more →]

Tags: Uncategorized

Interns and Cicadas Sing a Rare and Different Tune

May 12th, 2004 · Comments Off on Interns and Cicadas Sing a Rare and Different Tune

Some rise, some fall, some climb, to get to Washington. Kriston at Grammar Police has an amusing look at the plague of li’l critters about to descend on our fair city.

[Read more →]

Tags: Uncategorized

Operapalooza: Part Two

May 7th, 2004 · Comments Off on Operapalooza: Part Two

Wow. Wow wow wow. Siegfried was simply phenomenal. James Morris, a little shaky out of the gate in Das Rheingold, was on top of his game tonight, and Gabriele Schnaut definitely seems to have benefitted from getting to take an 18-year nap (and two acts off) before her duet with Siegfried… speaking of whom: Jon […]

[Read more →]

Tags: Uncategorized