Weekend

Summer in the city.

A look at a life of a Chinese immigrant in 1923 – fascinating stuff!

Imagine if it were Yoda dealing with the confirmation hearings; now, you don’t have to, because a law professor does it for you; hilarious posting on the Balkinization blog.

The passing of Walter Cronkite; they really don’t make anchor people like him, the model. Cronkite was well before my time (I still miss Peter Jennings), but he was tv’s way to witness history: especially with the moving way he handled announcing the assassination of Kennedy.

The tributes written are rather eloquent. Slate’s John Dickerson was especially poignant – since he has a personal element to it (his family was a news family, and his mother was one of the early newswomen of tv) and he notes:

By the time I made it upstairs, the kids wanted to know why I’d disappeared. I had been watching the Cronkite tributes when I should have been upstairs for bedtime prayers. I told them why he was important and that he’d worked with their grandmother. They wanted to know how old he was and how he died. They just wanted the facts. It was a little hard to convey to a 5- and 6-year-old what had happened, but there is one way in which Cronkite is a part of their nightly ritual. It’s his voice I try to imitate when I’m reading to them.

NY Times’ Alessandra Stanley and Time’s James Poniewozik make the tv critic’s perspective of the Cronkite career – and in a way, they touch on how the American media was different than it was in Cronkite’s prime. Is he the last of a breed, as this Washington Post appraisal asks; well, I’d say he was one of the first of the breed, of the pioneers who made the national television nightly news become part of a generation, rather than say whether he was the last (Dan Rather, Tom Brokaw, and Peter Jennings took the torch; that the media industry became what it is – well, I’d rather not blame it on Dan/Tom/Peter than on the networks’ managements or the American masses’ own shabby tastes).

Law Stuff

Sometimes I wonder where the Daily News gets their stories: a lawyer who loves being in parades.

Are blawgs dead?
I’d say no, but then again, I’m not exactly a follower of blawgs and I’m still wondering about the state of the newspaper business.

Getting ready for the Senate hearings on the confirmation of Judge Sotomayor (or, at least, tolerate the Senators’ bloviating and bad questions) this week; Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick with the preview. An even more in depth preview from National Law Journal’s Marcia Coyle

Hat tip from a friend/colleague of mine – link to this moving story in the NY Times, about Lloyd Gaines, who sued to enter the U of Missouri Law School during the segregation era, and then disappeared after winning the case in the US Supreme Court. A timely reminder about law’s impact on lives and the role of the NAACP, in time for NAACP’s 100th anniversary.

Weekends

4th of July weekend was very nice. Watched Public Enemies (decent movie, but it had me wanting so much more texture and depth from Johnny Depp and Christian Bale). Checked out the Morgan Library and Museum – which is turning into one of my more favorite museums, simply because Morgan’s library and study are fabulous 19th Century pieces.

This 2nd weekend of July: weekend Road Trip!

Saturday: Philadelphia – As part of the road trip weekend, siblings and I checked out the Star Trek: The Exhibition” at the Franklin Institute on Saturday, in Philly. It was mildly entertaining, but as even this review in the NY Times noted, I personally wished there had been more of a Science Behind Star Trek theme (the Krauss book, by the way — which I’m amazed that the NY Times review referenced! – is quite good on the physics of Trek, even if it is several years old now).

Guess Franklin Institute’s got to be entertaining, rather than educational.

And, needless to say, I – the Trekkie – probably knew way too much for my own good. And, the exhibit played mostly the soundtrack from either the original Trek series or “First Contact,” the latter of which is really good – and reminded me how the last Next Generation movie “Nemesis” left so much to be desired.

Dinner in Phildelphia: Jade Harbor, in Chinatown. Pretty decent food; clean bathroom, more or less (yes, I do get fussy about that).

Sampled a cheesesteak from Geno’s. Probably should have tried Pat’s, the rival.

Sunday: Saturday overnight was spent in Baltimore. Walked around the Inner Harbor area, walked around Babe Ruth’s museum. Caught the game between the Orioles v. Blue Jays. Blue Jays lost. I kept looking for ex-Mets players. Sigh. Didn’t get to do crab cakes, but perhaps another time.

First Krispy Kreme, now it’s going to be Tim Hortons? Tim Hortons coming to NYC?! I could’ve sworn NYC was a Dunkin’ Donuts town, way back when I was a kid and watching those “Time to make the donuts” commercials. Canadian coffee and donuts? If it’s really going to be at Penn Station, it should at least make the hockey fans content when they head to or from the Madison Square Garden and the Rangers games.

This coming Thursday: Juan Diego Florez and Natalie Dessay, in “La Sonnambula” on Channel 13’s Great Performances! Well, I’m something of a fan of both of them – Florez especially, as noted in previous posts).

Here at Triscribe, we talk about APA’s and we have certainly talked a lot about David Chang (or maybe it’s me who has been talking about him, but that’s because the NY Times and Charlie Rose make it easy to learn so much about him) – here, here, here (which contains the link to the Charlie Rose interview with Chang), plus I spent my birthday dinner at the Momofuku Noodle Bar. The latest: how David Chang spends a lazy Sunday – at home, watching… Charlie Rose on DVR? What? So glad to know you like Charlie Rose, Mr. Chang!

Last, but not least: eventually, I got to check out the new MoCA! Not that its old location is/was bad – the Mulberry St place made it a part of the community, right in the middle of NYC’s Chinatown (Chinatowns being the heart of the concept of the Chinese diaspora), but it’s great that they’re transitioning into bigger space. Fascinating review in the NY Times.