Stamping Tickets

Earlier this year the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts abruptly became the The Trump Kennedy Center. How has this gross expression of ego and incompetence worked out for them? Here’s ticket sales:

2020 & 2021 drops were due to the pandemic, of course, and 2022’s recovery due to the efficacy of the vaccine. 2025?

Trump’s unpopularity, his public displays of unearned ego, and his abuse of democracy. Artists are canceling, see above link, as they run from Trump’s diseased estimates of himself and his worth.

But all this is obvious.

Belated Movie Reviews

Bedknobs And Broomsticks (1971) is a brisk look at the role of a witch, located in Pepperinge Eye near the Dorset coast, in World War II, caring for young orphans and helping to repulse a German probe of British defenses. Roles of witch, orphans, raiders, and headmaster of the Witches’ Academy are well-delineated and filled, the result being a rather fun little romp.

Enjoy, as did we.

Don’t Sell At The Bottom, Ctd

Less than two weeks ago, DJT (Trump Media & Technology Group Corp) announced a deal to merge with fusion power company TAE Technologies, and DJT’s price jumped to $16.09/sh, more than a 40% gain – certainly nowhere near its peak of $97/sh, but perhaps a step towards it, or so many investors who are underwater are hoping. Any progress? Here’s a 1 month chart:

Nope. In fact, from that local high to today’s close of $12.57, it’s declined by 21%. Investors are not confident.

Perhaps in an effort to boost the price, DJT announced an addition to its, errr, menagerie of offerings:

Yorkville America Equities, sponsor and investment advisor for the Truth Social exchange traded funds (“ETFs”), announced that the first five Truth Social ETFs are launching today on the New York Stock Exchange.

The ETFs are part of the Truth.Fi fintech brand from Trump Media & Technology Group Corp. (Nasdaq, NYSE Texas: DJT) (“Trump Media”), operator of the social media platform Truth Social and the streaming platform Truth+. [Truth Social press release via yahoo!finance]

Their reasoning is a red flag:

Trump Media CEO and Chairman Devin Nunes said, “We’re gratified to make available a slate of ETFs for patriotic investors who want to invest in American ingenuity. These unique funds provide an excellent way for Americans to express their optimism about the strength, resiliency, and immense future prospects of the American economy.”

Designed to appeal to the inexperienced investor who has not yet learned to disconnect emotion from investing.

I have never learned the difference between mutual funds and ETFs, so I have little to offer on that front, but these instruments’ association with DJT are, for me, another red flag.

And, if meant to boost DJT’s price, it’s not having immediate success, see above. The next few business days should prove interesting.

Belated Movie Reviews

Denise: Mob boss.

Death on the Tyne (2018) is set on the ferry Tyne, I think it was, Newcastle to Amsterdam. Multiple dramas are occurring: a hen party, it’s the horny old Captain’s last cruise, his successor is engaged to the ship’s singer, and Draper’s Tours is shepherding a group of 55 assisted living residents to Amsterdam, while trying to propose marriage.

Sadly, only three residents actually make the tour, as the rest, uh, maybe died?

Oh, and the ferry’s mascot, Dippy the Dolphin, is murdering random victims.

Sounds silly? It is, it had my Arts Editor muttering.

But it has a saving grace: the dialog is not stilted and tired. It reveals the often self-centered thoughts of those delivering it – and some of it is hilarious.

Don’t get me wrong, you won’t recall this movie on your deathbed. I hope.

But if you like biting dialog, this may be worth a look.

Word Of The Day

Gnosis:

Gnosis is the common Greek noun for knowledge (γνῶσιςgnōsis, f.). The term was used among various Hellenistic religions and philosophies in the Greco-Roman world. It is best known for its implication within Gnosticism, where it signifies a spiritual knowledge or insight into humanity‘s real nature as divine, leading to the deliverance of the divine spark within humanity from the constraints of earthly existence. [Wikipedia]

Noted in “How a Private Conversation about Gender Got Me Fired from My Dream Job“, anonymous, LGB: Courage Coalition:

When I carefully, painstakingly pointed this out—like walking on eggshells—the pushback was swift and severe. Hell hath no fury like a woke woman mildly disagreed with by a “cis white man.” The women in the training absolutely piled on me. One Black woman from South Carolina told me that my anger was “blinding” me and that I needed to “listen” more. I’m fairly certain that she meant “listen” to her, because, as a woman of color—or better yet, a “Black femme”—she is in possession of a kind of wisdom, a gnosis if you will, or at least a vantage point atop the woke hierarchy that I, a “white cis gay,” will never fathom.

I Do Not Think You Know What That Word Means

Reject compromise, become more extreme, even in sense of humor.

A Republican lawmaker raised eyebrows after posting AI-generated images on Christmas Day that depicted him beating up Santa Claus.

Indiana state Sen. Chris Garten’s post on the morning of December 25, where he was pictured body-slamming Santa in front of the state capitol building, did not go down well with his followers on social media. [The Independent]

Nor did he react well when his vicious incoherence was criticized:

“With everything going on in the world, I struggle to understand why my evidently humorous post is considered news,” Garten told The Independent. “The fake outrage online is a stark reminder of how overly sensitive society has become, and maybe some self-reflection is in order,” he added.

A few hours after posting, Garten acknowledged the backlash in a follow-up message where he labeled his critics “snowflakes.”

While self-reflection is often in order in politics, abusing the big S Claus did not come off as humorous. I wonder how many calls for his resignation will result.

And if the Democrats will overperform, given the chance.

Lock It In Place

The venerable Freddie deBoer, self-aware leftist, has some remarks on the following lefty generations (partial paywall, gives you a taste):

The idea that “the personal is political” has proven to be one of the worst intellectual developments in the history of the left. I would argue that, more than any other ideological influence, this idea has underpinned the social justice turn in American liberalism, which has transformed the language and norms of contemporary left-of-center people and briefly the politics of the Democratic party. That famous little nostrum has ruled over a period of time in which any sense of politics as an exercise beyond and outside of the self has collapsed, leaving us with generations of progressive people who think that doing politics is all about feeling and not doing, who mistake posting black squares on Instagram and liking Frank Ocean for doing politics. “The personal is political” is why people think that crying until the other person stops talking is an appropriate way to debate, why the representation of Black woman in the next season of Love is Blind is treated as a bigger deal than lead in the drinking water in Black communities, why autism and ADHD have become lifestyle trends with vague activist connotations, why an entire generation of culture writers churn out pieces about how Inspector Gadget is propaganda for white supremacy, why left-of-center American politics is so horribly immaterial, why feelings have utterly eaten actual material oppression as the concern of the left. I’m not a fan.

I had not thought about, nor observed, this. In a sense, the personal is political is anti-compromise; it admits no error as there is no appeal to shared thoughts, and so becomes anti-intellectual; as a failure to explore options, the left, like the right, becomes obdurate and arrogant in its pitiful world.

This may require some meditation.

Typo Of The Day

“Parkinson’s is a preventable disease. It’s not a natural consequence of aging. Eighty-seven percent of Americans have no known genetic cause,” [Dr. Ray] Dorsey said. [WaPo]

We usually call it sex and get on with it.

Word Of The Day

Gastrocolic reflex:

If you’ve noticed that you often have to poop right after you eat, you might wonder if food just goes straight through you. It’s not that: It’s your gastrocolic reflex. It’s an automatic trigger in your digestive system that tells your bowels to move old food out to make room for the new. It’s perfectly normal, but it can differ between people. [Cleveland Clinic]

I shan’t share. Noted in “What you put in your coffee can have an outsize impact on your health,” Trisha Pasricha, MD (WaPo):

Leave time for a bowel movement

Have you heard of the gastrocolic reflex? It’s a physiological phenomenon by which substances enter the stomach and within minutes trigger contractions in the colon. Because of it, people often experience the urge to have a bowel movement shortly after meals, which, of course, can cause some social discomfort but is perfectly healthy and normal.

Coffee — and even decaffeinated coffee — has been found to be a potent trigger of the gastrocolic reflex in many people. If this describes you, plan your routine accordingly. Instead of chugging your coffee every morning only to sit in rush-hour traffic for the next hour, perhaps you should start sipping from a travel mug once you’re closer to your destination.

One Way Loyalty

From WaPo (paywall?):

Scanning a loyalty card might be costing you money.

Companies say they’re rewarding your devotion with points, discounts and perks. But behind the scenes, many are using these programs to monitor your behavior and build a profile — then charge you what they think you’ll pay.

I discovered evidence of this in my Starbucks app. Using California’s privacy law, I asked the company to send me the data its rewards program had collected about me.

Then I shared that data with two former Federal Trade Commission officials who spent careers defending consumers. They spotted a startling pattern in the numbers: During months when I bought more coffee, the app offered me fewer promotions. Sure, I was still collecting “stars” I could use for freebies. But the more loyal I was, the fewer discounts I got.

For the record, Starbucks denies it.

Look, call them by their most accurate name: identification cards. They let retailers identify and leverage individual buying habits, maximizing profits on your back.

I’m fortunate, I don’t think I’ve ever had such a card, but for unrelated reasons, not because I’m paranoid. Keeping life simple pays off.

Belated Movie Reviews

The shark tip-toed into the room. The door creaked, and Kolossus turned, startled. He didn’t remember that door!

Mega Shark vs. Kolossus (2015), the fourth in a series unfamiliar to me, is a wretched piece of work, but at least it has the basics of a plot – attempt to kill the eponymous shark, fail, losses, another attempt, more payment, that sort of thing. All logical in context.

But details matter, and here the details are silly. We could compare to an old favorite, Pacific Rim (2013), which also features sea monsters and robots – and is way beyond this. But the latter had believable characters, and this does not. It’s populated by tired cliches.

Don’t waste your time.

Get Out The Goat Entrails, Ctd

This goat is being sheared for completeness, as this special election did not result in a “flip.” Back in 2024, a bit over a year ago, incumbent David Yates (D-KY) defeated Calvin Leach (R-KY) for the District 37 State Senate seat in Kentucky, 60.4% to 39.6% – call it a 20 point victory.

A little while later, Yates resigned to take a different job. The special election to fill his seat took place a week ago, featuring Mr Leach again, and Gary Clemons (D). Mr Clemons defeated Mr Leach, and improved on the victory margin – 72.6% to 25.1%, or about 47 points, give or take.

This is in the same district won by Harris, a year ago, by only five points.

So when only 5170 total votes are cast, what does it mean? 41,584 total votes were cast a year ago, so just by eyeball the voter count dropped by nearly 90%. In my eyes, that’s significant and may mean that Mr Leach lacks voter appeal.

I wouldn’t pivot my judgment of the future on this special election.

Word Of The Day

Inherent contempt:

The third type of contempt power—Congress’s dormant inherent contempt power—is rarely used in modern times. Inherent contempt was the mode employed by Congress to directly enforce contempt rulings under its own constitutional authority until criminal and civil contempt statutes were passed, and it remained in use into the twentieth century. Under inherent contempt proceedings, the House or Senate has its Sergeant-At-Arms, or deputy, take a person into custody for proceedings to be held in Congress. [National Constitution Center]

In other words, Congress using their own martial powers to enforce their duly-determined laws. Noted in “Members eye ‘inherent contempt’ against Bondi after incomplete Epstein disclosures,” Steve Benen, MS NOW:

In theory, Khanna and Massie could try pushing a resolution to hold the attorney general in contempt of Congress, but in practice, such an effort would almost certainly end in failure: Not only would the measure need approval from the Senate, but it would also go to the Justice Department for possible prosecution. The idea that Bondi would allow her own team to prosecute her is unrealistic.

Inherent contempt proceedings in the House, however, can be approved by majority rule in the chamber; they would not need the Senate’s or the president’s approval; and, perhaps most importantly, they wouldn’t require the administration for enforcement.

We may be seeing this term of art thrown around often in the near future. I wonder if AG Bondi even knew it existed. I know I didn’t.

The Epitome…

… Of Amateurism.

The announcement of Trump’s Golden Fleet is a failure on so many levels.

  • Trump’s going to contribute to the design? It can take a decade or even more to design a new combat vessel (the article has estimates of 4-6 years, which I think is absurdly optimistic), and perhaps more for something that’s 1500 feet long and has the consequent complexity network issues. Trump may be dead of old age long before just the design is completed.
  • At an estimated (same link) $10B per, losing such a ship to enemy action, accidents, typhoons, and other events means that $10B is gone, along with the time to analyze what went wrong, correct the design, and build the replacement, go through change of design verification, crew recruitment and training, and deployment. Much better to have many cheaper ships. If you want more, research what happened to German WWII battleship Tirpitz after her sister ship, Bismarck, was sunk by the Brits.
  • While the weaponry cited extends the reach of a battleship, it remains highly limited compared to the most potent vessels in today’s navies, namely aircraft carriers and strategic submarines.
  • Will such ships need traditional armor for slugging it out with other ships? Maybe for surviving air attack, torpedo attacks, even drone attacks (see below), but every ounce of armor will add to fuel requirements. And if a nuclear power plant is used, then you need to develop highly sophisticated recovery techniques for what that ship sinks. Lucky for you, our nuclear powered aircraft carrier techniques may transfer.
  • The rest of the world has been watching Putin’s War and recognizing drones appear to be the next innovation. Us? We’re re-examining the Battle of Jutland, one of the last clashes of big ships — back in World War I. That said, yes, we can walk and chew bubble gum at the same time – but not when the bubble gum dates from 1910.

In short, this ‘golden fleet’ is symptomatic of a fixation on gold that has become a mental illness.

Or a deliberate distraction.

Belated Movie Reviews

Perhaps technically a TV series or serialized movie, The City and The City (2018) is unusual in its adherence to a lack of omniscient viewpoint throughout the first half (two episodes, four total), only slacking its rigidity in the second half to reveal certain important details.

This is the story of cop Tyador Borlu of the city Besźel, who has been assigned the murder of Mahalia Geary. In his backstory is the unsolved disappearance of his wife, Dr Katrynia Perla, a scholar, who has hidden connections to Mahalia. His pursuit of the truth, as assisted by Constable Corwi, takes him to Detective Dhatt of the city of Ul Qoma.

Or perhaps it doesn’t.

Between the central conceit of the story, on which I shan’t elaborate, and the flashback-heavy nature of the narrative, this is a tale requiring close attention, and a partner with whom to cross-reference the tale; we had to stop from time to time just to straighten out who was in what part of the story.

It was quite invigorating.

But there are enough holes, such as missing character motivations, to lessen the satisfaction of the story. It’s not overwhelming, and stories that leave open questions can be the best if the questions are those of morality: If that were me, would I have done that? But when they’re along the lines of Why did that character do that, it’s nonsense? then there may be fractures in the story structure.

But the positives of this story far outweigh the negatives. Simply as a brain exercise it’s worth the time; as a possible peek into the future, it’s thought-provoking.

Recommended.

Straying From The Foundation, Ctd

This much-referenced thread finally gets an update, some bad news for Democrats, as their DNC chairman, Minnesotan Ken Martin, has decided to go back on his word:

When Ken Martin was elected chair of the Democratic National Committee in February, he promised a report investigating what went wrong for his party in 2024. “The reality is what we need to do right now is really start to get a handle around what happened last election cycle,” he told reporters. “We know that we lost ground with Latino voters, we know we lost ground with women and younger voters and of course working-class voters. We don’t know the how and why yet.”

Ten months later, Martin has made a remarkable reversal. He will not release the long-awaited autopsy, he announced on Thursday, even though it’s done. Despite months of work — including hundreds of interviews with party operatives in all 50 states — and a pledge to use the report to drive the party forward, Martin appears to have decided that publishing it would be a “distraction.” [Zeeshan Aleem, MS NOW]

Part of the problem here is that there’s less than a year before the 2026 Elections are held, and it’s all-important, if you’re the DNC Chairman looking to move up, to win those elections and not upset everyone with criticisms of certain factions.

Without the report being available, it’s hard to know which factions. Maybe the folks who botched the management of the transgender issue?

Some unknown-to-me corruption-promoting faction?

Well, this is bad news for Democrats and independents alike, and good news for the Republicans. Maybe Martin’s a plant? I doubt it, but the Republicans do boast a lot of billionaires who are loose with their money.

Which means the Democrats will win in 2026 by a vanishingly small margin over a bunch of fourth-raters, and wonder, once again, where things went wrong.

Oh, So Tired, Ctd

The Presidential Address continues to generate comment. Here’s Erick Erickson and his palpable sense of dread:

The fact that the President and his team thought eighteen minutes of yelling a week before Christmas was going to be a helpful reset suggests they have even bigger problems. No one is going to remember this speech in a week, and probably not by the weekend.

That he felt now was a good time to do it seems odd. Certainly, the President’s supporters loved the speech. But will that give them reason to show up next November? They are not showing up with the President on the ballot. How does this speech change that? And independent voters are turning against the President. How does this speech change that?

It’s felt like someone yelling that the Vikings are still going to win the Super Bowl this season and you should believe him, but here in reality the Vikes have been, as they say, mathematically eliminated from the playoffs.

Yes, that bad. But what it conveys is a basic poor understanding of the world and how it works. It’s like listening to a monarchist talk about how monarchies are great stuff, when a single decision of a monarch can leave a country a smoking ruin. Think post World War I Germany.  And then their belief that some God or ‘nother has picked them for the spot and therefore it was not a bad decision.

My point, besides the observation that most folks who’ve failed to mature will dodge responsibility for bad decisions? That independents who are paying attention will see that behavior and not only recognize it as disqualifying for that individual would-be power-grabber, but damaging to their associated Party as well.

As critical as Erickson is being of his own folks, he needs to double it. No, he really does. Just as do the Democrats of themselves.

Here’s Andrew Sullivan (paywall):

On Wednesday night, we saw someone drowning, not waving. Underwater by 18 percent on the economy and 28 percent on inflation, he barked at us for 18 rushed minutes behind a podium, telling Americans that any economic anxiety is entirely because of Joe Biden, and that a new Golden Age is at hand. He then did a breathless Greatest Hits weave. …

I read that after my composition, but it’s mostly the same: Trump is falling apart as he doesn’t have the skills to navigate reality. Tough on him.

Belated Movie Reviews

And behind door #3 is … your mama!

Crimson Peak (2015) is a Gothic horror tale, and I’ll just come right out and say that I don’t understand the point of Gothic horror tales, but I’ll chat about it anyways.

Sir Thomas Sharpe has come to America in order to sell his invention, a mass mud extraction mechanism, with sister Lucille in tow. He comes across Carter Cushing, a very wealthy businessman and widower, and his nubile daughter Edith. Edith is an aspiring author – why this matters is never really clarified – who, as a child, was warned by her mother’s ghost, or perhaps some random trouble-maker ghost, about “Crimson Peak”.

Sir Sharpe fails to sell his invention to Mr. Cushing, and when he proposes to Edith, Cushing cuts him off at the knees, bribing the Sharpes to leave America immediately. But then Cushing is found dead in a communal shower, and Sharpe’s marital suit for Edith’s hand takes a turn for the better, and soon enough she accepts. Sharpe, having, he believes, secured funding, returns to his home.

Which is on a mountain where the mud runs red.

Well, Edith, despite being married, can hardly get laid unless she dangles her imminent inheritance in front of Thomas. She finds herself in a competition for Sir Thomas’ affections with Lucille … sister of Sir Thomas. The storytellers then, in what seems an interminable series of weird discoveries, hauntings, closeups on knives, and my Arts Editor commenting on their costumes, try to build suspense. I laughed a lot, and in retrospect I don’t think I liked Edith, or anyone else, enough to care.

Finally, in the midst of a snowstorm, the wine is clarified, along with the very sketchy backstory of Sir Thomas and Lucille, and Edith’s savior, who is so obscure we couldn’t recall if he was a surgeon or a lawyer[1], comes running in … and takes a knife to the belly. Competency at saving distressed maidens is generally appreciated in Gothic tales, but whatever. I do preach thinking outside of the box.

Well, in the context of frequent hauntings in this tale, it’s not entirely disingenuous to proclaim the characters live on, despite the general gouting of their blood, so regardless of your attachment to the good guys or the bad guys, The End is not really The End.

Perhaps the lesson of this tale is the consequences of being stubborn. Or maybe not. Since I didn’t really care for anyone at the end, I find the analysis to be a dubious enterprise. But if you like horror, with a heavy ladling atmosphere, you may like this modern take on the old Gothic horror tale.

Oh, So Tired, Ctd

Regarding the Presidential Address, Steve Benen has his list of top ten lies., which is useful in its reinforcement of the President’s relative consistency in lying; many liars are tripped up by their inconsistency, brought on by yielding to the impulse to lie when the truth is, at best, inconvenient to one’s ambitions[1].

His #1 bears repetition:

#1: “I negotiated directly with the drug companies and foreign nations, which were taking advantage of our country for many decades, to slash prices on drugs and pharmaceuticals by as much as 400%, 500% and even 600%.” This whopper claimed the top spot for me, because on top of the absurdity of the lie, one has to layer the fact this guy still doesn’t understand how numbers work.

That President Trump continues to make claims that would result in patients being paid to take drugs suggests he either considers his supporters to be dunderheads, or that his intellect has decayed to the point where he should be replaced.

It’s not a good look. Observers remarked that he appeared to be in a panic, which is certainly justified for the champion mendacity machine who’s finally failing in the face of reality. When will Vance dare to make his grab for glory? Does Trump have to drop in his tracks?


1 Robert Heinlein remarked, probably in his fiction, that there were two categories of lying. I forget the one, but the other was to tell the truth, but in such a way as to make it seem like a lie.

So Much Culture

If you’ve been holding your breath waiting for cultured, i.e., “petri-dish” meat, well, it’s time to turn purple:

For nearly a decade, it was regarded as one of the most promising companies in its field. Investors poured in, public attention followed, and hopes grew that it could help revolutionize how meat is produced. But last week it emerged, largely under the radar, that Believer Meats, formerly known as Future Meat, had abruptly halted operations. …

Industry sources say a series of management decisions left the company with no alternative but to lay off its roughly 100 employees in the United States and Israel and suspend operations entirely. The collapse has prompted a broader question within foodtech circles: if one of the sector’s most advanced companies cannot survive, what does that mean for the future of cultured meat? [Calcalist]

I always had trouble understanding how they were going to scale up the initial development work. Maybe they did, too.