March 31, 2008

Will I come to a grisly end?

Earlier, someone in the office was playing some jazz that sounded uncannily like the opening music in Manos: The Hands of Fate. That is all.

Posted by Sarah at 02:14 PM

March 19, 2008

Never has an ampersand been so bittersweet

Do you like Penn & Teller? Do you like the book World War Z? Perhaps you will enjoy this short film.

Posted by Sarah at 03:43 PM

At first I was like huh, then I was all yay

Ok, I clicked on the link to find a goofy web site for a project, but a spray dispenser for pancake batter is actually a really good idea: because you can make a single pancake just for yourself every morning for weeks!

Posted by Sarah at 01:45 PM

March 08, 2008

CSPI does something useful?

Airborne, the anti cold preparation, has not admitted that it can't actually prevent or treat colds, but is now refunding money! That sure took a while! So one only has to live through 9 years of coworkers enthusing about a cold nostrum with no possible mechanism to do what it says it does. Unfortunately, I think homeopathy is still protected from legal action for ineffectiveness by grandfather clause.

Posted by Sarah at 09:46 AM

March 07, 2008

I watch only for professional reasons, really

The Chicago Tribune has an interview with Tim Gunn about the just-completed Project Runway season, in which Tim dishes way more than I would have expected.

Posted by Craig at 10:20 PM

March 03, 2008

February Reading

The Black Book of Secrets, Higgins (Y)
Dark and atmospheric at the same time it is set in a slightly silly Dickensian city vs countryside. Not a jump-off-the shelves book, but I can certainly think of some young people who would like it. Three stars.

Town Boy, Lat
Sequel to Kampung Boy, and again it is entirely delightful. The pictures are perfectly expressive, and I can see why Indonesians are so proud of his work. Four stars.

Golden Legacy: How Golden Books Won Children's Hearts, Changed Publishing Forever, and Became an American Icon Along the Way, Marcus
Once upon a time, a printing company went into book printing to make money year round. They started publishing so that they could best utilize their presses. They sold the books at a low price to people who didn't usually buy books at stores that didn't usually sell books. The publishing side employed excellent artists at incredibly low rates and denied them royalties because these artists' only other option was to go home to countries ravaged by the Nazis. Book topics were chosen to fit into a unified display at the Woolworth's store. Media tie ins were standard, in fact Golden was the first to do really well with Disney properties. Oh, and J. Fred Muggs, too, at least before he bit someone on national television. Blatant advertising to children within the book itself was perhaps a first: a book about children using bandages was packaged with Band-Aids and sold in a display with boxes of Band-Aids. And they treated Richard Scarry like dirt. This uncritical corporate biography can't hide the horrifying underbelly (or perhaps belly exposed to the world) of Golden Books. Ugh. The pictures are really nice, though. Two stars.

Posted by Sarah at 05:57 PM