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In the News

The Protocols of the Drunk Drivers of Malibu, Part 3

Rob Schneider’s heart was in the right place for calling out Mel Gibson in an open letter posted as an advertisement in the August 3rd edition of the Hollywood rag Variety (shown below):

Rob Schneider's open letter to Mel Gibson.

Hearts in right places aside, I doubt that his “I’ll never work with you, Mel Gibson!” swagger will be any more effective than a hypothetical threat by Britney Spears to never work with transistor-inventor-turned-race-eugenicist William Shockley, her knowledge of semiconductor physics notwithstanding.

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In the News

Who Really Runs Hollywood (or: "Help me, Tom Cruise!")

Courtesy of Ryland and Miss Fipi Lele: the poster shown below, which was apparently designed and approved before Mad Mel’s arrest and rant.

'South Park' ad with the kids standing in front of the Scientology Celebrity Center and the headline 'C'mon Jews: Let's show them who really runs Hollywood'.

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In the News

The Protocols of the Drunk Drivers of Malibu, Part 2

'sugartits.org' is still available.

For those of you looking for a domain name for your Mel Gibson-lampooning site needs, sugartits.org is still available. Get it now before someone else does!

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In the News

Blogging Across the Front Lines

Lisa Makes the Wall Street Journal

My friend (and fellow Blogware blogger) Lisa Goldman, who blogs at On the Face, is the most prominently featured of several Israeli and Lebanese bloggers covered in an article on the front page of today’s Wall Street Journal: In the Midst of War, Bloggers are Talking Across the Front Lines. Here’s an excerpt:

Most of the bloggers in this small group are Western-educated. Some attended the same universities but communicated for the first time in a comment thread on one another’s blogs. Of course, on a blog, it is hard to tell whether a given contributor is in a bombed-out neighborhood in Beirut or an apartment in the U.S. In recent days, many of the Lebanese bloggers in this small community have fled the country, to Syria or Europe or the U.S.

The future of this odd new cross-border community is being tested by the current conflict. Some bloggers have stopped their exchanges. Others are still talking.

The Internet has made it possible “to have a Beirut-Tel Aviv online IM chat in real time,” Ms. Goldman wrote, on her On the Face blog. “That’s what happened to me and this blogger a few nights ago. We chatted while he was sitting on the roof of his apartment building in Beirut watching missiles from Israeli planes fall on his city and describing it to me. He was carrying on an online conversation with another Israeli at the same time.”

The Lebanese blogger, who runs the Lebanese Political Journal blog, won’t disclose his identity because he believes his online chats with Israelis could be considered an act of disloyalty. He says in an email: “Chatting with Israelis from Lebanon during war is very awkward.” But, he says, “One remembers that we are still humans regardless of where the borders lie.”

The Wall Street Journal article is behind a subscription wall, but Lisa’s copied the text of the article and put it on her blog here. The WSJ often syndicates its articles in other papers; the story also appears in the Birmingham News, a newspaper in Birmingham, Alabama.

On the Covers of Time Out

If you’re a suave world traveller like Yours Truly, you’re probably familiar with Time Out magazine, the “what’s hip and happening in the city” magazine that publishes versions for several cities around the world. Two of the cities in Time Out roster are Tel Aviv (where Lisa lives) and Beirut. Lisa has a story about the editors of Time Out’s Tel Aviv and Time Out Beirut. It begins like this:

This is the story of two men, one from Beirut and one from Tel Aviv, who met less than four months ago and formed an instant friendship. They believed that the things they had in common were far more significant than politics – until the twisted reality of the Middle East interfered with that conviction.

In case you hadn’t already seen the covers when Boing Boing linked to them, I’ve posted them below.

Here’s the cover of Time Out Beirut, which was prepared before the war:

Cover of 'Time Out Beirut' from just before the 2006 conflict.
Click the image to see the original on Flickr.

And here’s the July 20th cover of Time Out Tel Aviv, which is based on the classic New Yorker cover that depicted a New Yorker’s view of the world:

Cover of 'Time Out Tel Aviv' from July 2006.
Click the image to see the original on Flickr.

Categories
In the News Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Cracking Down on Dork Bi… — oops — Pocket Bikes

Photo of a pocket bike in action with the caption 'Maybe this is cool and I just can't tell.'

I’m surprised that the Toronto Police have to crack down on pocket bikes; I could’ve sworn that the shame of riding one of those dorky little things would’ve been a sufficient deterrent.

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Geek In the News It Happened to Me

"This One Time…at BarCamp…"

BarCampt Toronto logo.

“Organizers call the ‘un-conferences’,” says the teaser line for the article titled “This one time…at BarCamp…”, “with no PowerPoint, unpaid guest speakers and lots of audience participation. Find out how they’re spreading across Canada, and beyond.”

So begins an article over at IT Business that features an interview with some of us involved with Toronto BarCamp and DemoCamp activities: David Crow, Jay Goldman, Bryce Johnson and Yours Truly. We did a phone interview with the article’s author, Grant Buckler, last Tuesday before DemoCamp 8.

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In the News

In the National Post: Divided They Blog

In the Issues & Ideas section of today’s National Post, you’ll find Adam Radwanski’s op-ed piece titled Divided They Blog [paid registration required].

Here’s an excerpt:

Last week, a contributor to a popular Canadian weblog posted a blistering attack on Islam. Under the heading “Islam Must Be Stopped“, someone called “Right Girl” weighed in on “the devil that they call Allah”, labelled Islam “a death cult” and called for the entire religion to be banned in Canada.

If Right Girl has stood on a street corner calling for Islam to be banned, passers-by would either have shouted here down or dismissed her as a kook. Any newspaper that publsihed her views would have been deluged with disgusted letters to the editor. But in this forum, the comments that followed her post lauded her for taking such a brave stand — and in some cases, went even further in their attacks on Muslims.

The blog in question was The Shotgun, found on the Western Standard’s Web site. But the issue wasn’t the conservative magazine, which of course can’t be held responsible for the messages that wing nuts post on its blog. The issue was the broader blog medium that’s having a nasty effect on public discourse.

Radwanski’s article looks at the increasing polarization of the blogosphere, a phenomenon that didn’t truly get its start until after the September 11th attacks. The combination of the attacks and the hotly-contested U.S. presidential elections months before have certainly stoked the political fires on both sides, and technical factors such as the rise of blogs, the drop in computer prices and the increasing availability of broadband internet over wires or WiFi, has lowered the barrier to entry for anyone to make his or her opinions heard.

This combination of increased poltical ire and cheap and ubiquitious tech has had an effect on discourse. There’s a natural tendency for people to gravitate to others who reinforce their own beliefs and ideas. That in itself isn’t a bad thing — that’s how communities get formed — but there’s a tendency to form what bloggers sometimes refer to as “echo chambers”. “Both sides would have you believe that they’re engaged in a righteous war with one another for the soul of America,” writes Radwanski, “But because they never actually engage each other, it’s not a war at all — it’s just two sides endlessly rallying the troops”.

That certainly holds true for the local blogosphere. I’ve attended a number of gatherings of political bloggers where the lean was either clearly left or right; it’s very rare that people from either group ever mingle. In fact, a good number of bloggers on each side have never heard of the more popular blogs on the other side. They might as well be speaking different languages.

I do make an effort to go and attend gatherings of bloggers with whom I don’t agree. I even maintain cordial relations with people with whom I’ve sparred online, which is easier than one might think. It’s one thing to flame someone with a blog entry or in a comment; it’s another thing to do so face-to-face.

As for RightGirl, Wendy and I have met her. If the topic of politics were guaranteed to never come up, I doubt that Wendy would object to having brunch with her sometime. That’s less likely in light of some of the noxious things RightGirl wrote, but I hold out hope that someday such a gathering will be possible. I am mindful of the fact that people tend to be a little more strident when writing, and that judging her solely on her recent articles about Islam reduces her to a one-dimensional cipher. Yes, what she wrote was in my opinion hateful, wrongheaded and downright ignorant. But if we close the door on dialogue — remember, we’re only pointing blogs at each other, not bullets or rockets — what hope is there for the people actually aiming lethal weapons at each other?

Here’s the closing paragraph of Radwanski’s article:

True, we don’t yet have entire TV programs devoted to advancing an ideology [if some of the shows on FOX News don’t already do so, they come pretty close — Joey]. But with commentators increasingly emulating the zealous partisanship of the online crowd in the hope of eliciting similarly strong reactions, it might not be long. It’s a trend that should remind us to hold ourselves to a higher standard, to seek out dissenting views and think critically about the perspectives being sold to us — because the last thing we need is a nation of Right Girls and their sycophants.

I would say: Right Girl, si, some of Right Girl’s vitriol, no.