Riba Rambles:
Musings of a Mental Magpie

About the author: Elisabeth in early 2007, photo by Todd Belf
Elisabeth "Lis" Riba is an infovore with an MLS. This is her place to share whatever's on her mind, on topics both personal and political. [more]
Latest posts:
Search archives:
  or
Special collections:
Also by this blogger:
Blogroll:

Blogroll Me!
If you are searching for any of the following names -- Elizabeth Reba, Elizabeth Riba, Elisabeth Reba, Liz Reba, Lis Reba, Liz Riba, Elizabeth Ann Reba, Elizabeth Ann Riba, Elizabeth Anne Reba, Elizabeth Anne Riba, Elisabeth Ann Reba, Elisabeth Ann Riba, or Elisabeth Anne Reba -- welcome to my blog. Here's my homepage.

Comments by: YACCS
This page is powered by Blogger.
 
Friday, August 08, 2008
Milking this for all it's worth
Posted by Lis Riba at 8:08 AM
From Schoolhouse Rock:

More Music:

  • Eight Beautiful Notes (the Count sings Klezmer!)
  • Eight Little Notes, by Rowlf
  • Eight Days A Week, by the Beatles (did this influence Terry Pratchett at all?)
  • Henry the Eighth, by Herman's Hermits

And don't forget the dining opportunities afforded by the day:

  • Pairs of petit-fours
  • Wash it down with a Ward Eight; with V8 for the teetotalers.
  • And follow all that up with some After Eight mints...

If you want more, Wikipedia has an entire page dedicated to the number eight.

Meanwhile, one last Sesame Street segment before I head off to work:

Permanent link Email this post  
The Infinite Beauty of Eight
Posted by Lis Riba at 7:18 AM

A Flickr Group Pool:


Created with Admarket's flickrSLiDR.
Permanent link Email this post  
Pieces of eight
Posted by Lis Riba at 7:00 AM
Permanent link Email this post  
Thursday, August 07, 2008
The important thing is the rhythm
Posted by Lis Riba at 11:25 PM

Just discovered ProhibitionRepeal.com, a website dedicated to the 75th anniversary of the re-legalization of alcohol in the United States, by the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States.

Among the features of the site is a massive list of "Prohibition-era" speakeasies one can visit.

Still nothing in New England, alas...

BTW, if you want to mark your calendars, the official anniversary of Repeal Day will be December 5th.

I already know of several bars planning special events for the occasion, including Eastern Standard.

And, this finally gives me the chance to post one of my favorite headlines evah, from The Gray Lady herself.

The New York Times, December 5, 1933:
Bartenders Poised for Drinkers' Rush - 1,000 Licensed Places to Keep Radios Tuned In for the Repeal Proclamation -- ORGIES ARE FROWNED ON -- Countless Parties to Drown 'Old Man Prohibition' as the Night Wears On

Frowned upon? By whom?

I'm seriously thinking of making some CafePress t-shirts out of this article...
[If I did, would anybody else be interested?]

PS: My work earlier this evening also illustrates the difference between information and knowledge. I found all these bars mentioned on the web, tracked down proof of their existence and found links where available, but for all I compiled in my earlier entry, I still don't really know much about the trend of modern speakeasies, other than it exists and these are examples. For that, I'd need to actually dig into the establishments' websites, look at the menus and read their rules... If I were doing this for myself, that would be my next step; but this was a request of Ian's, so I gave him the links and am now asking him what he's learning from them. Handy division of labor, that.

Permanent link Email this post  
What big eyes you have
Posted by Lis Riba at 10:25 PM

I decided to take this quiz because everybody on my friends list is talking about it. While that's typically described as "following the herd," I'm not sure if sheep references are appropriate in this case:

Your result for The Harry Potter Husband Test... Mrs. Lupin

Remus Lupin

Your perfect HP man is Remus Lupin.

You like a nice, kind guy with a bit of a fierce streak and you don't mind if he comes damaged.  Sure, he may take some convincing since his  self-esteem's so low, but once you win him over, you know he's yours for life.  Unless of course he has an attack of "I'm not good enough" and runs away, but luckily he's also good at making friends who will push him back into line if necessary.

  • You scored 62% on Lupinity, higher than 70% of your peers.
  • You scored 35% on Snapesquity, higher than 15% of your peers.
  • You scored 48% on Harryness, higher than 16% of your peers.
  • You scored 29% on Ronness, higher than 3% of your peers.
  • You scored 30% on Lockhartiness, higher than 55% of your peers.
  • You scored 62% on Dumbledority, higher than 91% of your peers.
  • You scored 33% on Dudleyness, higher than 65% of your peers.
  • You scored 44% on Siriusness, higher than 20% of your peers.
  • You scored 31% on Mad-Eye-osity, higher than 12% of your peers.
  • You scored 51% on Nevillity, higher than 48% of your peers.
  • You scored 43% on Jamesiness, higher than 17% of your peers.
  • You scored 58% on Billiness, higher than 39% of your peers.
  • You scored 52% on Twinsosity, higher than 27% of your peers.

Take The Harry Potter Husband Test at HelloQuizzy

Permanent link Email this post  
Of all the gin joints...
Posted by Lis Riba at 9:25 PM

Ian asked me if I could do some research into the modern speakeasy revival movement.

Here are some of the establishments I found after about 90 minutes on the web:

LocationName and Link (where available)
Alexandria, VAPX
Birmingham, ALBlue Monkey Lounge
ChicagoThe Violet Hour
LA, Warehouse DistrictThe Big Deal (unconfirmed)
LACrocker Club (under construction)
LAthe bar in Comme Ça restaurant
LAThe Edison
NYC105 Riv
NYCAngel's Share
NYCPDT (Please Don't Tell)
NYCPegu Club
NYCThe Randolph
NYCWeather Up
NYC, Lower East SideThe Back Room
NYC, Lower East SideMilk & Honey
NYC, TribecaSmith and Mills
Portland, OregonSecret Society
San FranciscoBourbon and Branch
San FranciscoClock Bar
Milwaukee, WIRed Light

Plus, several articles on the trend, from newest to oldest:

Permanent link Email this post  
Wednesday, August 06, 2008
We'll always have Paris
Posted by Lis Riba at 7:56 AM

If that's not to your taste, Stephen Colbert makes the case for Britney.

Permanent link Email this post  
Book of Job
Posted by Lis Riba at 7:40 AM

Blogging has been sparse this year. Among the reasons: work has been particularly demanding, absorbing much of my brainpower with issues that I don't blog.

But I think I can open up about one of the matters I'd been keeping close-lipped:

My department at work has more than doubled in size since I arrived.

To deal with the increased workload, my manager was hiring a front-line manager to handle the day-to-day details, freeing him up for more of the big-picture issues.

I applied for the position.

And, this week, he told me that he chose somebody else (an external candidate).

During the past month, my thoughts about being a manager have fluctuated between excitement and terror (without really hitting the middle ground), so it shouldn't be too surprising that my disappointment is tinged with a certain amount of relief.

But mostly disappointment.

As part of my preparations, I'd been cramming business books. Hopefully, setting those aside (at least temporarily) will free up a little more time for blogging.

How are you doing?

Permanent link Email this post  
Monday, August 04, 2008
Yet another book I want to read
Posted by Lis Riba at 9:44 PM

Reviewed in the latest issue of Scientific American:

Quoting Publisher's Weekly:

Duke University geneticist Goldstein was part of a team that did groundbreaking, headline-making research on Jewish genetic history. Goldberg clearly and succinctly explains such concepts as "haplotypes" and "genetic drift" as he reviews such findings as that more than half of contemporary Cohanim , or priests-traditionally believed to descend from the biblical Aaron-actually share a genetic marker called the Cohen Modal Haplotype. Among other subjects, he also explores evidence consistent with the claim of the obscure Lemba tribe of southern Africa to be descendants of ancient Israel. Lastly, in taking on a 2005 study of a group of so-called Jewish genetic diseases-such as Tay-Sachs-and their putative evolutionary connection to high intelligence among Jews, Goldberg notes that this hypothesis is easily testable but firmly rejects "pseudoscientific genetic determinism." Goldberg's role in much of the research into Jewish genetic history, his sober, unsensationalist tone and his emphasis on the limited conclusions that can be drawn from such work lend credibility to his account of his stunning results.
Permanent link Email this post  
Round up the usual suspects
Posted by Lis Riba at 9:36 PM

Slashers are often accused of misinterpreting source material to read in homoerotic relationships.

But sometimes, the innuendo is blatant enough that it can no longer fairly be called subtext.

After watching Casablanca yesterday afternoon, I looked up the screenplay, which is readily available online.

For those unfamiliar with the film, Captain Renault, played by Claude Rains, is quite the ladies' man. But here's how he describes Rick Blaine (Bogart's character), whom he regularly addresses as "my dear Ricky":

Well, Mademoiselle, he's the kind of
a man that, well, if I were a woman
and I...
     (taps his chest)
were not around, I should be in love
with Rick. But what a fool I am
talking to a beautiful woman about
another man.

Describing these events to Rick a short while later, Renault says:

                          She was
asking about you earlier, Rick, in a
way that made me extremely jealous.

No discussion of Louis would be complete without mentioning this exchange:

            RICK
How did you get in here? You're under
age.

            ANNINA
I came with Captain Renault.

            RICK
     (cynically)
I should have known.

            ANNINA
My husband is with me, too.

            RICK
He is? Well, Captain Renault's getting
broadminded.

Of course, the final nail in the coffin comes from the introductory description for Captain Renault in the script -- a passage I hadn't seen until today:

In the group is CAPTAIN LOUIS RENAULT, a French officer
appointed by Vichy as Prefect of Police in Casablanca. He is
a handsome, middle-aged Frenchman, debonair and gay, but
withal a shrewd and alert official.

While the word gay has shifted in meanings over the last century, it's been used for homosexuality long enough that it's a plausible interpretation here.

What do you think?

Permanent link Email this post  

TOP

 

Copyright © 2002 - 2008 Elisabeth Riba,
All Rights Reserved