The Center for American Progress held an advance screening of Kevin Costner’s new movie, Swing Vote [self-playing Flash], in downtown DC last night (oh, yeah … we’ve been staying with Kelly’s parents this week). Kevin Costner himself and the star of the movie, Madeline Carroll, were at the screening and made some comments before the movie.
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July 2008
One-way streets
Looks like the A View Of The Cityblog has caught up to MT.Net on the issue of downtown’s one-way streets.
Let’s hope this issue builds some momentum and city and state leaders work together to improve downtown Raleigh’s traffic flow.
California this time of year
My friend Matt sent me this link to encourage us to vacation in California.
I’ve already spent one day in choking-thick smoke. That was plenty, thank you. I don’t want to spend a week in it.
Time to throw another dart at the map and pick a new vacation destination.
How Jesse Helms saved webcasting
My friend Kevin Sonney mentioned his experience with Jesse Helms’s constituent services. It reminded me of one time I had to applaud Jesse, too.
Back in 2002, Internet radio was under attack when the evil DMCA pushed by the Recording Industry of Association of America was due to jack up royalty fees that would have effectively killed webcasting.
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Jesse Helms
Senator Jesse Helms died early this morning at the age of 86. Though the Senator was wrong in nearly every stance he took, I have to admit he was one heck of a politician who did a lot for the people of North Carolina. The white, heterosexual people, anyway.
I’m reminded of my friend Wade’s bizarre brush with the late Senator back in 2005.
Happy birthday, country!
Happy birthday, America! You’re 232 years old today.
I watched American Experience’s episode on Alexander Hamilton this week. He was a far more interesting character in our history than I had thought.
Video of substation fire
Yesterday I came across this cool video posted to YouTube from Florida Power and Light. In 2001, an electrical substation in Miami short-circuited and blew up – and all of it was caught on tape by a FPL employee. Watch as the high voltage slices through the substation, finishing itself off in a massive fireball. It reminds me of the fire at the substation at the corner of Martin Luther King Boulevard and East Street in 2001.
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Grade 9
Grade 9
Barenaked Ladies
I found my locker and I found my classes
Lost my lunch and I broke my glasses,
That guy is huge! That girl is wailin’!
First day of school and I’m already failing.
This is me in grade nine, baby, this is me in grade nine
This is me in grade nine, baby, this is me in grade nine
I’ve got a blue-and-red Adidas bag and a humongous binder,
I’m trying my best not to look like a minor niner.
I went out for the football team to prove that I’m a man;
I guess I shouldn’t tell them that I like Duran Duran.
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Facing the bottles
I’ve been fortunate not to have to travel much lately but when I do I usually do it alone. I like to eat good meals when I travel as there is only so much fast food one can consume before losing one’s mind. Thus I’m often walking into restaurants as a party of one.
What many hosts and hostesses like to do is to park single customers at the bar. While I would rather not take up a 4-spot or 6-spot table with my lonesome, I find a bar seat to be a bit wanting.
When I’m eating alone in a new place, I like to spend my time absorbing the surroundings. A fly on the wall, if you will. Unfortunately, a lot of bars aren’t configured this way, making customers at the bar face a wall of glass and mirrors rather than the rest of the restaurant.
Restaurants that put the bar out in the open are the ones that get it right, at least for people-watching clientele like me.
Home Depot recycles CFL bulbs
Remember my post about the dangers of not recycling CFL bulbs? I just got word from the City of Raleigh’s recycling program that Home Depot will accept CFL bulbs for recycling. Says Linda Leighton, Raleigh’s Waste Reduction Specialist:
Compact fluorescent lights (CFLs) are lighting more homes than ever before, and Raleigh Recycling encourages our residents to use and recycle them safely. Carefully recycling CFLs prevents the release of mercury into the environment and allows for the reuse of glass, metals and other materials that make up fluorescent lights. Until now CFLs had to be taken to one of Wake County’s Household Hazardous Waste Facilities, the North Wake facility open the first Saturday of each month and the South Wake facility open the third Saturday of each month.
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