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Wednesday, February 7, 2024
A No-Hitter!!
Tuesday, February 6, 2024
Argylle
Lisa and I went to see Argylle tonight. It's the story of a spy novelist, played by Bryce Dallas Howard, who finds herself embroiled in a real life adventure when a spy, played by Sam Rockwell, saves her life from an assassination attempt.
Ok, first, the elephant in the room: we didn't see if for Henry Cavill, but posters be danged he's in it for all of like four minutes.
Second: what an odd movie.
I enjoyed it, but if you can't figure out the plot by the end of act one and identify ten other films just like it in thirty seconds, you're a dummkopf.
And there are some tripppppy scenes LOL. Lisa fell asleep during the film, woke up to me laughing out loud at the insanity of the oil skating scene, and thought she was dreaming LOL
It's a mess. Not a boring mess, but a mess.
Grade: C
Toby Keith
Saturday, February 3, 2024
Friday, February 2, 2024
Carl Weathers
Corbin Burnes has been Traded, and the Brewers Executives Suck
Tuesday, January 30, 2024
My Thoughts - On the Never Ending Quest for the "Twist" that Makes the Truth Sell (Again)
Anything and everything will be disputed by academia.
No one gets their name in print by saying "The established understanding of this text/action/ event is correct and there's nothing left to say about it" - even if that established understanding is, in fact, correct.
No one. No matter how great the writer, or how famous their name.
It's exhausting.
Before you go labeling me a flat-earther, I'm not talking about fields like medicine and hard science where you should be emphasizing new research and new ideas.
Even in the liberal arts I'm not above revisiting even a well-traveled topic once every few decades or whenever the fundamental basis of our comprehension has changed - if you discover that JFK faked his death, yes, then let's revisit the Warren report, shall we?
What I *am* saying is that caution should be exercised whenever you see a new secondary source put forth information or a point of view notably at odds with what has come before. It doesn't mean its wrong, and in fact in might be the course-correction needed to put the tale right . . . but too often, especially in biographies, what gets you published is novelty; what gets you sales is dirt, and neither word necessarily includes the concept of "truth."