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“The Shawshank Residuals”

An enduring, deserved success:

Bob Gunton is a character actor with 125 credits to his name, including several seasons of “24” and “Desperate Housewives” and a host of movie roles in films such as the Oscar-winning “Argo.” Vaguely familiar faces like his are common in the Los Angeles area where he lives, and nobody pays much attention. Many of his roles have been forgotten.

But every day, the 68-year-old actor says, he hears the whispers—from cabdrivers, waiters, the new bag boy at his neighborhood supermarket: “That’s the warden in ‘Shawshank.’ ”

He also still gets residual payments—not huge, but steady, close to six figures by the film’s 10th anniversary in 2004. Since then, he has continued to get “a very substantial income” long past the age when residuals usually dry up.

“I suspect my daughter, years from now, will still be getting checks,” he said.

Via The Shawshank Residuals @ Wall Street Journal.

The Newspaper that Touts Chilling Effects

One would think that a newspaper – in the business of printed and online speech – would wish to reduce chilling effects, that is, threats of lawsuits or government action that might intimidate citizens into refraining from the exercise of free speech rights. 

One might think that about some newspapers, but for the Janesville Gazette a lawsuit against a student for comments about his UW-Whitewater professor is a chance to opine against online speech, generally.

I have no idea about the merits of this case (it may be sound), but it’s simply strange for a newspaper to seize on this as a general warning against speech

Here’s the Gazette‘s editorialist on what this lawsuit says to students in America: “Other students, in college or high school, should proceed with caution before risking similar fates amid today’s proverbial Wild West of online commentary.”

See, Our Views: Students must proceed with caution in criticizing instructors.

Next up for the editorialist: (1) Keep Off My Lawn, (2) Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram: Benign Media or Radical Plot Against America? and (3) Why Don’t You Leave the Thinking to Movers and Shakers Like Me?

The editorial follows the line of argument in Greg Peck’s blog post on the subject from last week.  

Reading the Gazette is sometimes a sad and frustrating experience.  It’s like watching a ship slowly sink while the crew fuss with passengers over whether everyone has the right dress for a formal seating. There’s a value to proper attire; formal clothing means little when waves are washing over the ship’s decks.  

The Gazette‘s saddled with a crony-capitalist editorial opposition to free markets, has an editorialist-blogger who whines about how hard he has it (in working-class Janesville), publishes editorials that distort developments at Whitewater’s meetings, and frequently pushes views that are mediocre effort after mediocre effort in defense of insiders’ big spending. 

It’s a multi-million-dollar paper where all that money’s not enough to arrest decline, not enough (seemingly) to cure a profound cluelessness about new media. 

Wisconsin has a robust blogosphere, of left, center, right, and libertarian.  I’d never be so foolish as to trade places with those of an old media outlook. There are precious few independent bloggers anywhere who’d make that trade. 

Stodgy, befuddled, and perhaps embittered: a whole world of independent publishing and free expression is simply a ‘wild west’ to this editorialist.  One could remind of Clay Shirky’s Shock of Inclusion repeatedly, but it would either be misunderstood or simply ignored.  

That’s why, despite generations of publishing, old newspapers struggle, while other, dynamic papers and websites flourish.     

 

Daily Bread for 5.28.14

Good morning, Whitewater.

It’s already the middle of the week, and we have a mostly cloudy Wednesday ahead, with a high of seventy-three.

The Community Development Authority’s Seed Capital Screening Committee meets today at 3 PM, and its Board of Directors at 5 PM.

Google’s latest self-driving car has discarded the steering wheel:

Google has revealed it plans to build its own self-driving cars from the ground up, per an announcement from founder Sergey Brin at the Code conference Tuesday. The company revealed one such car to Recode, a highly compact two-seater without a steering wheel.

Google had previously been retrofitting Toyota Priuses and Lexus SUVs with its self-driving technology. The cars were approved last week for use on public roads in California, and Google demonstrated the technology’s ability to navigate complex traffic situations in cities at the end of April.

The prototype Google revealed differs from the Priuses and Lexuses in that they can’t let humans take over the job of piloting; they are completely controlled by the onboard computer. In addition to lacking a steering wheel, the Google-built car also has no accelerator, no brake, no mirrors, no glove compartment, and no soundsystem (your tiny smartphone speaker will have to do). The cars are capped at a modest 25mph and are started and stopped by a button.

Perhaps, in time, many cars will be without steering wheels.

Here’s Puzzability‘s Wednesday game in its Out of State series:

This Week’s Game — May 26-30
Out of State
We’re taking a road trip for the unofficial start to summer. For each day this week, we started with the single word that completes a state’s nickname in the phrase “The ___ State.” Then we hid it in a sentence, with spaces added as necessary. The answer spans at least two words in the sentence and starts and ends in the middle of words. The day’s clue gives the sentence with an interstate sign in place of the nickname.
Example:
We learned that younger members of the local Native American triinterstateaged just a few years living on the reservation once they became adults.
Answer:
Beaver (tribe averaged)
What to Submit:
Submit the nickname (as “Beaver” in the example) for your answer.
Wednesday, May 28
The school princiinterstateday with the field trip chaperones to help prepare them for tomorrow’s trip.

The Truth About Preferential Treatment

Cases in which a person successfully demands preferential treatment from government (that is, an unfair advantage not available to other residents), require two parties, not one. 

There must be an entitled man or woman who demands access or opportunities that would routinely be denied to others, but also a craven official who acquiesces to that selfish request. 

What Reagan said about the Soviets’ need to cooperate toward arms control is true in this context, also: it takes two to tango.  

Daily Bread for 5.27.14

Good morning, Whitewater.

Tuesday brings a likelihood of afternoon thunderstorms and a high of seventy-eight.

Whitewater’s Urban Forestry Commission meets today at 4:30 PM.

Friday’s FW poll asked readers about their most anticipated summer-blockbuster films.  Of the choices available, Godzilla (15.79%), Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (14.04%), and X-Men: Days of Future Past (14.04%) led the responses.

On this day in 1844, a socialist community near Ripon begins its short life:

1844 – Utopian Community Founded Near Ripon
On this date the first settler moved to the Fourierite utopian community in what is now Ripon. This communal society was based upon the teachings of Charles Fourier, a French Socialist, who urged the rebuilding of society from its foundation as the only cure for economic hardship. This especially appealed to those suffering from the 1837 Depression. The communal village was named Ceresco after the goddess of agriculture, Ceres. Also known as the Wisconsin Phalanx, the community thrived for six years, with membership reaching 180 in 1845. The community officially disbanded in 1850 after many members decided to farm for their own profit. Families gradually left the commune to work and live on their own property. The center of the commune, the “Long House,” remained vacant until the 1930s when people suffering from the Great Depression found shelter and comfort there. Community founder Warren Chase said of the failed community “It was prematurely born, and tried to live before its proper time, and of course, must die and be born again. So it did and here it lies.” [Source: Wisconsin Saints and Sinners by Fred L. Holmes, pg. 94-104]

Puzzability has a new series entitled, Out of State. Here’s Tuesday’s game:

This Week’s Game — May 26-30
Out of State
We’re taking a road trip for the unofficial start to summer. For each day this week, we started with the single word that completes a state’s nickname in the phrase “The ___ State.” Then we hid it in a sentence, with spaces added as necessary. The answer spans at least two words in the sentence and starts and ends in the middle of words. The day’s clue gives the sentence with an interstate sign in place of the nickname.
Example:
We learned that younger members of the local Native American triinterstateaged just a few years living on the reservation once they became adults.
Answer:
Beaver (tribe averaged)
What to Submit:
Submit the nickname (as “Beaver” in the example) for your answer.
Tuesday, May 27
We were amazed at the skill of the cowboys at the rodeo, who could lasinterstateaging bull after another.