Day: June 30, 2007

  • Doctor Who – Utopia – The Sound of Drums – Last of the Time Lords – Review (sort of)

    Utopia, The Sound of Drums and Last of the Time Lords was the three-part finale to the Tenth Doctor’s second season, and featured the resurrection of the Master, the Doctor’s greatest foe.

    I’m not going to do my usual breakdown on these episodes, suffice to say that Utopia, even with its rather pathetic representation of the end of the known universe was a great episode. Derek Jacobi’s performance was amazing as both professor Yana (stupid, stupid name) and the Master.

    His turn as the Master was all too brief, being replaced by John Simm, late of Life on Mars, as an absolutely bonkers Master – and I don’t mean that in a good way.

    The story rapidly tanks throughout Sound of Drums and plumbs new depths in Last of the Time Lords. It’s the poorest ending I can think of in a long time – perhaps since the end of Life on Mars, so, not that long actually. A John Simm curse perhaps or just a stupid idea.

    Although I like Simm, I did not like this portrayal as the Master just being nuts. I preferred him much more as a calculating, arrogant villain. It’s a sad crutch of writers these days that they cannot simply portray someone as “evil.” To be evil they seem to think, you have to be crazy. Crazy characters aren’t interesting.

    So much promise, such a letdown.

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  • The Peace Poles

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    There’s a movement, started apparently in Japan after World War II to plant Peace Poles around the world.

    Notwithstanding the efficacy of this approach towards actually achieving world peace, not too long ago they came to Taiwan. A group of Japanese went to certain important locations around Taiwan and placed these poles.

    One of which, seen here, is near Alishan.

    Now, I have nothing against this sort of thing, unless my tax dollars are being used for it, but it’s largely a non-event to my mind.

    Not so, apparently, in Taiwan, as some people were protesting because the poles had been placed without benefit of a feng shui consultant and were ruining the feng shui of the of the island.

    I had read about this “controversy” some time ago when they were placed, but I never expected to see one! I know my feng shui felt all out of kilter when I walked past.

    If I though they had a feng shui practitioners union in Taiwan, I’d be inclined to blame this on them.

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  • Will this grow a magic beanstalk?

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    I’ve already recounted my tale of the Giant Rat of Sogo, in which I was trapped for 4.5 hours in a rat-infested department store, but what I failed to mention were the “magic” rocks.

    We were in the bedding department, negotiating the purchase of a house-warming gift. The negotiations were in Chinese, so I was bored and pondering the other items in the area when I came across the item pictured here. I made the mistake of having my wife ask what it was.

    The story I got was, to put it mildly, absurd. This special pad is filled with amazing, magical rocks from brazil, that exhibit an miraculous healing properties.

    When the pad interactions with your body heat and humidity, it generates a natural electrical field and negative ions, which promote health and well-being.

    It’s good to see that snake-oil merchants haven’t been put out of business or relegated into cyberspace, they’ve settled into major department stores in Taiwan.

    The sales girls were so keen to sell me this pad that they insisted that we take it home and try it out for two days. I know there are no magic rocks or demonstrable health benefits derived from negative ion bombardment or electrical stimulation – at least not of the type they were claiming, but I thought it would make an interesting blog post.

    So I tried the pad in the spirit of scientific inquiry – zip, nadda, nothing. It gets a bit warm and sweaty, which is not a good thing in Taiwan.

    So we returned it, especially since it cost over US$ 200. Yes, that’s not a typo. Two-hundred US dollars. Even more frightening: They make entire mattresses out of the stuff. I couldn’t stand to even find out how much that cost!

    Finally, I did a little research on the “magic” rocks. It’s nothing more than tourmaline, a semi-precious gemstone with no “magical” properties whatsoever. (The phenomena of being both pyroelectric (generating electricity from heat/cold) and piezoelectric (generating electricity from mechanical stress) are completely natural, explainable and scientific. None of which renders healing properties any more than magnets do.) Being pyroelectric does mean it is great for collecting dust, though.

    I couldn’t make this stuff up if I tried. People are just falling all over themselves to believe nonsense.

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  • Living like penguins and consequently dying like penguins (Part II)

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    Continued from Part I

    So, I was complaining about the “green fever” that’s sweeping Taiwan, and why it doesn’t make sense when implemented in a knee-jerk fashion or without the benefit of scientific inquiry.

    The in-laws wanted us to eat more food at home. They feel it’s valuable family time. My wishes that I want to go try different places that I can’t get back in Arizona didn’t enter into their equation.

    Fair enough, maybe it’s true that we needed more “family time.”

    I’m sure they get just as much out of “family time” with me as I do from them… which is nothing. Their Chinese is far beyond my comprehension, and their English is insufficient to hold a conversation with me. Having a dinner conversation with my wife as translator is not fun for either of us.

    I don’t like my in-law’s cooking, either.

    On the last night I ate at home with them, they insisted on having a meal at home and they prepared several dishes, plus, without really asking me one way or the other, a separate dish of pork chops just for me. (Never mind my fears about getting diseases passed on via toilet paper fed to pigs.) The problem is, while I love pork chops, or steak, or whatever type of “western” food my mother-in-law prepares… she doesn’t know how to cook it.

    What I got was thin strips of shoe leather marinaded in turpentine.

    Since I have no part to play in the dinner conversation, it takes an extra special effort not to show my… delight… at the special food made just for me.

    [Hang with me, I haven’t really lost my train of environmentalism thought, we’re just taking a necessary detour.]

    One alternative would be for me to cook for them. That would be fine, I enjoy cooking and I make many tasty dishes. I know they’d eat them and, even if they hated them, they’d smile and carry on… and they don’t have blogs to write about it in, either.

    The problem is, you can’t get the ingredients here and they have no ovens to cook in.

    Chinese cooking does not traditionally use an oven so it’s no surprise that homes aren’t equipped with them.

    They do have a toaster oven. It may be older than I am, and has a cubic volume of about 10“X8”X6“=480”3 It’s hard enough to reheat pre-cooked bacon or toast a slice of bread in, let alone cook anything that requires heat.

    It should go without saying that there’s no microwave. “Microwaves are unnatural and sneak out of the ovens and are dangerous. A friend told me that and they wouldn’t lie.” Never mind the fact that the physics of microwaves makes it impossible for them to “sneak out” of the oven enclosure. (I later learned that friend actually owns a microwave. I wonder what the word for “hypocrite” is in Chinese?)

    So, after the dinner, I was talking to my wife about my shoe leather marinaded in turpentine. (Which, it turns out, my wife actually cooked, under her mother’s supervision.) Thoughtfully, she did at least sneak a little salt onto the chops. Her mother wouldn’t let her use it because, apparently, just a pinch of salt will kill you stone dead, instantly. (Let’s just ignore the facts that the elements of table salt are crucial for life and that they body contains approximately 7 tablespoons at all times or that it is particularly important to maintain salt intake when you’re in a hot, sweaty climate like Taiwan.)

    But here’s where we get fully back on that environmental track. My wife did something before frying my pork chops that was unconscionable to my mother-in-law’s way of thinking: They had just used the same skillet to cook some of their food and my wife washed the skillet with soap before reusing it!

    Yes. Using soap is a no-no. Apparently, they don’t wash their dishes with soap anymore. “All those detergents are bad for the environment.” They just wash ’em off with water and if they’re greasy, they use the rinse water from the family rice. “Starchy water has been proven to be the best thing to remove grease.” Yes, it is an old-time remedy to remove grease, but “best” is a comical use of the word.

    So here’s what would be a typical evening: Sitting around the house, being eaten alive by malarial mosquitoes (despite your all-natural bug spray), eating all-natural pork that’s fed on human and animal waste, off all-naturally dirty dishes.

    It’s an all-natural lifestyle that reminds me of a Monty Python skit, which goes something like this: “To study the penguins, his team spent six months in Antartica living like penguins… and consequently dying like penguins.”

    That’s how it feels here. They’re trying to take one big collective step into the stone age so we can live and die just like cavemen without the benefits of thousands of years of progress. “Natural” doesn’t always mean “good”. Malaria, Cholera and Typhoid are “all-natural,” too.

    I unashamedly proclaim that the history of western science and technology is characterized by the word “progress.”

    It hasn’t achieved utopia, and it isn’t without its tradeoffs, but we don’t die on average under the age of 30 anymore or live our lives malnourished and struggling all our lives just to get food and survive.

    Progress brings new problems and new challenges, but this almost new-age nonsense to chuck it all and live the simple, natural life is a deluded ideal that completely disregards the weight of history. The “good old days” generally sucked.

    I can’t say for certain that my in-laws behavior is “typical”, but based on commercials, the products on the market and interactions with other people, this mentality is being ingrained in the popular culture.

    Not coincidentally, that was the last meal I would eat in my in-laws house on this trip.

    (It’s also a pity on the first week or so I didn’t know about the rice water for cleaning the dishes, which they collected in a pot in the sink. Naturally, I saw it as dirty water in a dirty pot in need of washing in the sink with the rest of the dirty dishes, and would rise soda bottles out and dump the rinse water in it, and sometimes even place my dirty plates in it. I didn’t know.)

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  • Greatest Scientific Event in History

    The single greatest scientific discovery of all time happens while I’m out of the country – typical!

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