Things That Go Bump in the Mess Hall

Well, those crazies did try to warn us President Obama was intent on destroying the country from within.  This weekend he was at Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan converting/recruiting unsuspecting U.S. troops with the super-secret, infectious move: the terrorist fist bump.

bump

From the White House Flickr stream.

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SolarBeat

Celestial tones — or — what the planets would sound like if they were a music box.

solar system music box

(Nod: Information Is Beautiful)

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Say Cheese to New Packaging

Back in August, I mentioned I first saw the new Stop & Shop branding on the milk jugs and cartons.  In the post, I commented, “I hope this cohesion [of the new branding] is extended to their line of shredded cheese because it’s a mess.”  The cheese aisle in August:

stop and shop shredded cheese

Well finally this week, I noticed the new branding started creeping into the cheese packaging.

stop and shop cheese

stop and shop cheese

Great to see a more cohesive packaging in the Stop & Shop dairy aisle.  I’ll have more on Stop & Shop’s repackaging endeavor some other time.

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Just a Bill?

He’s not just a bill.  No, not only a bill:

bill

See here if you missed the joke.

(Nod: Nagle)

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“The Unfinished Business Is Done.”

kennedy

From The Washington Post:

The political odyssey of health care reform in many ways is the story of Ted Kennedy, and as President Obama signed the historic bill into law Tuesday, Kennedy’s gravesite was a place of quiet celebration and poignant reflection.

The late senator’s widow, Victoria Reggie Kennedy, spent hours Sunday at the simple white cross at Arlington National Cemetery marking where her husband was laid to rest only seven months ago. Ted Kennedy’s youngest son, Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy (D-R.I.), visited on Monday morning and left a hand-written note that read: “Dad, the unfinished business is done.”

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A General Milling About the Cereal Aisle

I haven’t posted any branding/packaging images in a while, so here you go.  Recently at the grocery store, I discovered a mother lode of new packaging: General Mills cereals.  Except for the Kix packaging, the design seems retro, so I wonder if this is a limited-time redesign similar to the Oreo and Ritz redesigns from last summer or if this indeed a temporarily permanent redesign.  Either way, these look great.  Gone are the Americanized, ADHD-inspired design elements like arced balloon text and swirls within swirls.  Instead, we have simple text, simple layer styles, and simple design elements.

cherrios redesign

lucky charms redesigncinnamon toast crunch redesignkix redesign

More please!

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Yes We Can! Hell No You Can’t!
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(Nod: Roger Ebert)

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Approved

From the White House Flickr stream today:

approved

In case you’re concerned that the president can’t draw a circle, his name contains 11 letters, but he used 20 pens to sign his name, so more than one pen was used for some letters.

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Toles

Another brilliant cartoon by Tom Toles:

toles

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More Chat Roulette Piano Improv

Ben Folds, impersonating his impersonator, signs into Chat Roulette during a concert and serenades the people he meets.  Amazing:

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Here again is his impersonator.  Also amazing:

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(Nod: Nagle and GOOD)

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“This Is What Change Looks Like”

White House photographer Pete Souza captures President Obama applauding the House passage of the health care bill last night:

obama

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The Health Care Vote

The Atlantic’s James Fallows on why this moment matters:

For now, the significance of the vote is moving the United States FROM a system in which people can assume they will have health coverage IF they are old enough (Medicare), poor enough (Medicaid), fortunate enough (working for an employer that offers coverage, or able themselves to bear expenses), or in some other way specially positioned (veterans; elected officials)… TOWARD a system in which people can assume they will have health-care coverage. Period.

That is how the entire rest of the developed world operates, as noted yesterday. It is the way the United States operates in most realms other than health coverage. Of course all older people are eligible for Medicare. Of course all drivers must have auto insurance. Of course all children must have a public school they can attend. Etc. Such “of course” rules offer protection for individuals but even more important, they reduce the overall costs to society, compared with one in which extreme risks are uncontained. The simplest proof is, again, Medicare: Does anyone think American life would be better now, on an individual or a collective level, if we were in an environment in which older people might have to beg for treatment as charity cases when they ran out of cash? And in which everyone had to spend the preceding years worried about that fate?

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Toles

toles

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Chat Roulette Piano Improv

Fantastic stuff:

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(Nod: Nagle)

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They’re Creepy and They’re Kooky

addams family

/Film is reporting Tim Burton will work on a 3D, stop-motion Addams Family film—something that seems better fit for Tim Burton than a glove is fit for a hand—based on the original cartoon by Charles Addams.  So if his past films are any indication, Gomez will be voiced by Johnny Depp and Morticia by Burton’s wife, Helena Bonham Carter.  And we’ll get a Danny Elfman score instead of a Marc-Shaiman-doing-Danny-Elfman score as we did in Barry Sonnenfeld’s 1991 film (terrific score nonetheless).  Seems like this good be great.

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A + B = C

I haven’t posted a Sporcle quiz lately, so here you go: Name the movie based on other characters the actors have played.  This is what I call “The Movie Game” and have played with people in the past.  The idea is this: An actor in movie ‘A’ and an actor in movie ‘B’ starred together in movie ‘C’.  Got that?

For example, I would say, “Edward Scissorhands and The Lord of the Rings,” and you would say, “Pirates of the Caribbean” because Johnny Depp in Edward Scissorhands and Orlando Bloom in The Lord of the Rings starred together in Pirates of the Caribbean.  It’s a fun game for when you need to pass some time (waiting, driving, etc.).

Sporcle takes this concept a little further.  Instead of giving movies, they give you character names from those movies.  This version is a little harder, I think, because if you don’t know who played the character and don’t know what movie that character is from, you’re stuck.  At least with knowing the movie (in my version), you might have an idea who was in that film.  With this version, there are enough clues that you can still probably have a shot.  Try it!

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Toles

Tom Toles takes on the Texas Crusaders.

toles

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Klein Pwns Pence

Boom.

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Brackets

After about four months of development time and a few very long nights last week, my NCAA touchscreen brackets graphic debuted on SportsCenter yesterday. ESPN college basketball analyst Doug Gottlieb revealed his bracket using the Perceptive Pixel touchscreen.

Here are a few short videos of Doug in action yesterday:

Part of my fun with this project was working with all the anchors and analysts who will be interacting with the touchscreen. Yesterday I was in support mode making sure Doug was comfortable with the graphic.

Doug making a pick:

doug gottlieb ncaa tournament brackets

Doug tossing away two teams’ stat panels:

doug gottlieb ncaa tournament brackets

Doug and others will be using the touchscreen throughout the tournament, so check it out on ESPN!

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Keep America Afraid?

Marc Thiessen, former speechwriter for President Bush, was on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart last week promoting his new book.  While not much about the book was discussed, the two political opposites had a very good discussion about the role of justice in the war on terror.

One of the points in contention was this McCarthy-esque ad produced by Liz Cheney’s group Keep America Safe:

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Here’s Stewart’s and Thiessen’s exchange:

Please enable Javascript and Flash to view this Flash video.

It seems to me that Thiessen, Cheney, et al. are merely interested in stoking the flames of fear in the minds of Americans—much like Joe McCarthy.  One of the things that makes America great is our foundation on the rule of law.  Even in a time of war, adhering to that set of governance is crucial to remaining a free people—it’s what makes us better than the “bad guys.”

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iMaxi iPad Case—With Wings!

We all should have seen this one coming: The jokes about the iPad’s name continue.  The iPhone Blog posted yesterday Etsy is releasing a case for the iPad called the iMaxi.  And it has wings.

imaxi

This is as creative of a case as AirMail’s folder sleeve for the MacBook Air:

airmail

Which was made in response/homage to Steve Jobs at the keynote address announcing the Air.

jobs with macbook air

Well done.  Well done.

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Betty White is Awesome

betty

Saturday Night Live head writer Seth Meyers on Twitter yesterday confirmed on 08 May, Betty White will be hosting the show.  Fantastic!

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“Dr. Linus”

linus

“Dr. Linus” certainly wasn’t the most exciting or most tense episode of the series, but it was a great episode to move the story along and start giving us answers (keep reading).  Here are a few thoughts:

But something that I wanted an answer for didn’t get: How did Ben escape from the temple?  Last week we left him in an unsettled state backing away from Sayid, and this week we see Ben running through the jungle.  Did he use the secret passage, too?  If not, how did he get past smokey?

Some future action (don’t know what yet) will reset everyone’s timelines at some point before the crash of Oceanic 815.  Therefore, the flash-sideways that we see now really isn’t an alternate realty like the writers have said; instead, it’s THE timeline.  This theory of mine was backed up by:

The most revealing piece to me was when Roger Workman mentioned the Dharma Initiative and leaving the island.  That was the first mention of the island in any flash-sideways we’ve seen so far.  Something happened to change what we know of their past.  What was it?  And when was it?  We also found out that Richard Alpert was given a gift by Jacob and that presumedly Richard came to the island on the Black Rock.

Back in “The Substitute” when we were first introduced to Dr. Linus, a friend of mine and I thought that his teaching subject, European history, wasn’t an accident.  For instance, why not have Ben be a statistics teacher or a grammar teacher; European history was chosen for a reason.  Perhaps that reason was revealed in this episode.  When discussing Napoleon on Elba, Dr. Linus mentions something about Napoleon being powerless on his own island—a parallel to Ben on the LOST island.

That wasn’t the only parallel between on-island and off-island Ben.  In both story lines, Ben was tempted by Locke and was given the choice of being the Ben we’ve known for so long or a different Ben; he could choose the self-interested path to power, or he could act for the greater good.  Both on-island and off-island, he resisted temptation and chose the more righteous path.

Final thought: Walter Peck is still a dick.

Can’t wait for next week!

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Superhero Super-news

/Film reports Christopher Nolan and his team are developing a new Superman film AND a third—and final—Batman film.

The key thing that makes the third film an great possibility for us is that we want to finish our story. And in viewing it as the finishing of a story rather than infinitely blowing up the balloon and expanding the story…I’m very excited about the end of the film, the conclusion, and what we’ve done with the characters. My brother has come up with some pretty exciting stuff. Unlike the comics, these thing don’t go on forever in film and viewing it as a story with an end is useful. Viewing it as an ending, that sets you very much on the right track about the appropriate conclusion and the essence of what tale we’re telling.

I think I just peed a little.

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Do You Know Where Your Cows Are?

GOOD this week linked to a website called “Where Is My Milk From?” that will, upon entering a code found on your milk container, tell you where in the U.S. your milk came from.  Very cool and very interesting to see 1.) where it came from and 2.) what larger distributor is behind “generic” milk.

For instance, my Stop-and-Shop-branded milk is produced by Garelick Farms in Franklin, MA.  They make their own milk, but apparently they also produce Stop and Shop milk.

stop and shop milk map

Last week I had Market-Pantry-branded milk from Target.  This milk came from Byrne Dairy in Syracuse, NY.

target milk map

I probably wouldn’t have thought anything of this, except I started watching Food, Inc last week.  The film mentions that so few food corporations control the American food supply, and even when you think you’re buying a different brand, you really aren’t.  Nowhere on either milk cartons are Garelick or Byrne mentioned.  That seems obfuscatory at best, nefarious at worst.

See where your milk came from (and who actually produces it).

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