Friday, December 28, 2007

Day of the Week Drama

Since being home, I have lost all of my day-of-the-week sense. I've decided this very unique situation is likely only shared by other college students on ridiculously long breaks, infants, and the elderly. Even the unemployed can probably tell a Tuesday from a Saturday based on traffic, other peoples moods, etc.

It doesn't help that my parents are taking random days off mid-week, ruining any schedule I was slowly creating in my mind. In college, its all about getting to Thursday- in the working world, Friday is the goal. Right now, I don't have a specific day I look forward to; a Friday could be as much or as little fun as a Monday. I am essentially in Purgatory.

This phenomenon, however, has instilled in me an above-average sense of dates. I know what I'll be doing on December 31st, but I couldn't tell you what day of the week that is. January 5th, no clue. Talking to a friend the other day about going skiing, we reached an impasse very quickly. It went something like this:

Hey do you wanna go skiing next Wednesday?
What's the date?
I don't know.
Well, I can go on the 2nd, 3rd, or 4th.
What days of the week are those?
I don't know.

Hopefully this little problem of mine will sort itself out fairly quickly. I feel like nobody else is having a similar day-of-the-week problem. If calendars didn't exist, I would end up staying in my house all day, watching soaps, playing solitaire, and eating dinner at 4:30.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Movie Update

Inspired by Andy's movie rating update, here are the (new) movies I have seen so far this break, and my ratings:

Charlie Wilson's War 8/10
Kite Runner 5/10
Juno 9/10

Ratings (hopefully) coming soon:

Atonement (really excited to see this)
There Will Be Blood

*On a side note, I would suggest everyone make a stop at their local Target. All Entourage seasons are $15, Arrested Development $20, and the OC $20, among others. I just bought Entourage season 3a so if you happen to go to Vassar, I would suggest buying 3b (you know, for posterity).

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Facebook and the Availability Heuristic

I'm pretty confident that at some point in every Facebook-users life they have been drawn into reading some irrelevant wall to wall conversation between two "friends" they barely know (only on Facebook, right?), or random people within their network.

Now, in the interest of cognitive economy we humans tend to use heuristics, or shortcuts, to quickly evaluate situations. I would argue one of the most dangerous heuristics we use on Facebook is the Availability heuristic, which is essentially the act of forming conclusions about a person, situation, event, etc. based on examples that are most readily available. Here's a fictional scenario:

Person A: yo last night was so crazy. so many kids were there. we gotta hang out more often. call me about tonight we gotta party again
Person B: yeah so nuts. you were out of control. haha so funny. ill def call you later

And a very special Winter break scenario:

Person A: oh man, i can't wait for you to come to _______ to visit me. its gonna be so sick. we're gonna party so hard.
Person B: yeah, i'm so excited. how are the ladies in _______. you better hook me up dude.

So what can we take away from these conversations. Well, these kids are pretty cool and fun. I mean, they party all the time, and are really sociable. While these are pretty ridiculous assertions based on such a short conversation, it's hard not to make some larger (positive) assumptions about these people. Initially I read these types of exchanges and think "wow, these people must have exhausted all other means of communication talking about their crazy exploits, the exploits spilled into Facebook for everyone to see."

The fact that I don't actually believe that statement has more to do with time of exposure than my own mental processes. However, when you quickly read wall posts (which you often do quickly and in high frequency), you rarely have time to develop a valid conclusion. Shortcuts are taken in the interest of time, a shocking occurrence that is making kids with high wall post counts look disproportionately cool.

The only solution to this problem is to start wall-posting about everything I do: "oh man great time at dinner. so crazy" or "can't believe you said that in the library haha". How cool will I look? I mean, if you didn't wall post your friend about it the next day, it never happened.

Saturday, December 22, 2007

New Music Drop

Being home with no school work to think about has afforded me time to check out some new music. Now, I hate when people overload me with all these bands they love, so I'll keep it short.

Yeasayer "All Hour Symbols"- don't know much about this band but I like what I hear so far.

Band of Horses "Cease to Begin"- New album for these guys I guess. I hate the band name but that's neither here nor there, right?

Silversun Pickups "Carnavas"- This isn't too-new of an album, but I rediscovered it after hearing one of their songs on Newport Harbor (can you believe Chrissy?)- anyways really good stuff.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Ruin the Ending

In a recent post, Ryan Holiday of ryanholiday.net, blogged about how he manages to read books that are intended, theoretically at least, for people with more formal education. At 20, his favorite topics include Greek History and Applied Economics, subject areas he has never taken classes in.

Among his suggestions for understanding a book regardless of your education level, two stuck out for me: Ruin the Ending and Read the Reviews. Before you even open the book, he says you should go to wikipedia and find out what happens. Then, he says, go to Amazon and read the reviews of the book.

His theory is that once you know what happens, you can concentrate on why it is happening and how each development will affect the resolution. The reviews will give you an idea of the important themes and cultural significance of the work- while you may come to these same conclusions yourself, the idea is that you can appreciate them as they come. This also gives you some idea of how other people interpret the book and creates a (virtual) discourse that will amplify your understanding of the book.

This is definitely an interesting theory; I also think it does essentially what Ryan Holiday intends it to do: increases your understanding of some written material. I found this was this case when reading On the Road earlier this year. I personally didn't find the book that much of a page turner; but its On the Road, the book that defined a generation (or whatever the back cover said). Reading the book, knowing how many people it had inspired or resonated with, became a much more rewarding experience. I had read quite a bit about Jack Kerouac, On the Road, and the whole Beat Generation thing before reading the book, something that made it much easier to appreciate the style and pacing of the writing.

I can't decide if knowing the ending or major themes of a book makes reading it any less enjoyable. Maybe Classics are more conducive to this type of pre-reading. Who knows. If I give this strategy another shot, I'll let you know.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Drugs are fun

I found some unintentionally funny quotes in my Forensics text tonight and thought I'd share:

On Marijuana: "...initial restlessness and hilarity followed by a dreamy, carefree state of relaxation; alteration of sensory perceptions including expansion of space and time; and a more vivid sense of touch, sight, smell, taste and sound; a feeling of hunger, especially a craving for sweets..."

Ok, how can you read that and not want to smoke? This part comes just after the section where we find out marijuana produces no physiological or psychological dependencies. Anyways...

On alcohol: "The drinker's personality becomes expansive, and he or she exudes confidence"

Nice.

On field sobriety tests: "The ability to understand and simultaneously carry out more than two instructions is significantly affected by increasing blood-alcohol levels"

Probably true.

On an unrelated note, my last exam is tomorrow then I'm out of here. It's been a great few months; I'm looking forward to next semester.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

What your finals week drink order says about you

Coffee, cream and sugar on the side: this is probably your 5th cup today

Anything with the word chai in it: ultimate frisbee is one of your interests

Tea with honey: is it hard to study in pants that tight?

Cappuccino: female

Large black coffee: your syllabus and calculator are out and you've already determined how badly a C weighted 30% fucks you

Feel free to share more. I've got a paper to write.

Finals and such

So finals have sort of kept me from posting much this week. I could of sworn study week was fun last year- this year I've just been super stressed. I've spent most of my time writing this research paper about oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska. I guess I can't complain too much since I picked the topic. So now I've killed two birds with one stone- milked a blog post out of a required research paper. Anyways, here's a excerpt:

Based on “The Official Energy Statistics from the U.S. Government”, the United States imports just over 10 million barrels of crude oil per day. At this rate of consumption, the entire crude oil supply of the 1002 area (the proposed drilling area) in the ANWR could be consumed by the United States in a period of between 425 and 1,180 days (assuming reservoir probabilistic values of 95% and 5%, respectively)...Alaskan reserves as of December 31, 2005 were 4.17 billion barrels of crude oil. If the 1002 ANWR area predicted reserves were added to these known Alaskan reserves, shifting U.S. imported oil to Alaskan production would last between 842 and 1,597 days.

Just goes to show how dependent we really are on foreign oil- pretty frightening.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

I'm sorry, fine me

I came across this article about Rodney Harrison being fined for taunting Baltimore Ravens coach Bill Billick. He was fined $5,000- not that significant I know but what was really crazy was that he has been fined over a quarter of a million dollars in his career (this is in addition to a $470,000 fine he paid for using human growth hormone- hate to even mention this. Patriots. Cheating. Let's move on).

So now I really want to know what happens to that money. I hope the NFL is good enough to donate all this money to charity. I don't see how they can't. Assuming this is the case, I am now a big fan of fines. Usually athletes get fined for doing crazy shit (Steven Jackson, others) that is usually hilarious to watch and later joke about. Then they give money to charity- everybody wins (unless someone gets hit in the face, in which case, they lose).

Could we fine people for more things in the real world? I know there are fines for lots of things like speeding and hitting your wife but I'm proposing fines for lower scale things. Didn't turn in your paper in time? $10 fine. Forgot to call someone back? $5. Questionable hook up? $20 (This one has the most potential- you could put the money in a fund that finances parties with better looking girls. Problem solved). You get the idea. I actually think this is a terrible idea- mainly just because I'm cheap.

Saturday, December 8, 2007

3:10 to Yuma

So this was a great movie. Imdb confirmed this for me with a very high 8.2 (#173 overall) rating but I needed to see it for myself. Ultimately the movie came down to the amazing performances of two great actors: Christian Bale and Russell Crowe. While I normally feel that Bale is the better actor (see American Psycho, Rescue Dawn, etc.) Crowe did a slightly better job of creating some internal moral conflict.

Unfortunately it looks like this movie wont get too much Oscar buzz- check out "There Will Be Blood" with Daniel Day Lewis- probably the best actor of our generation. I feel this may steal considerable Oscar buzz. Trailer here. It also seems to be coming out at the right time- oil is pretty hateable right now.

I havent looked much into 3:10 but my first reaction was that Bale and Crowe should have switched roles. I wouldn't normally jump to this sort of critique; however, judging the performances of Bale in American Psycho and Crowe in Gladiator it was the logical move. Bale is a method actor who can pretty much adapt to any role (see Rescue Dawn, The Machinist) In my opinion, he would have been a much better sociopath than Crowe. Likewise I feel that Crowe would have played a more compassionate rancher. While I got the feeling that Crowe was the more functional killer, Bale just always seemed on edge and became more believable as the unpredictable killer.

Notes: Love how Bale was such a money shot (doesn't this always happen in movies?) and how his son was a Zach Efron double

Also loved the last scene. Can't ruin the movie but see it yourself
Thought this clip from the Ali G show was pretty funny and is sort of related to my earlier post. Skip to 3 minutes 10 seconds.

I've heard a rumor that there is going to be a Bruno movie. Hope this is true

Why Sin City is so great

Ok so I just watched Sin City for the second time in as many weeks. Has to be in my top 5 for movies. I don't think there is much disagreement out there about whether or not it's good. (Evidence here) I've come up with a few more reasons why I love this movie so much (in no particular order)

-With the voice overs, the movie is almost entirely composed of quotable dialogue. To0 many to list.

-Mickey Rourke's voice

-The ratio of hot girls to ugly ones. On the order of 100:0 if thats even possible.

-Jessica Alba as a stripper. Just the idea of this is exciting.

-I have no reservations about having a man crush on any of the characters.

-Josh Hartnett's small role. Hitman who gets with the girls before offing them- pretty money.

-The segmentation of the movie. Each part can pretty much stand alone which is good if you are pressed for time

Thoughts on Consistency

Consistency is totally underrated. I recently had a good conversation with a friend about how important consistency is in personality and temperament. Knowing what to expect from someone seems pretty boring on the surface- maybe true, but I would argue that the person was probably boring to begin with. Its pretty frustrating to have to guess how someone will react to a comment or a new situation. There must be some adaptive heuristic at work that tells you, based on every situation you've seen a person in, how they will react in the future. This goes out the window with inconsistency.

The only way to handle inconsistency in my opinion is to be as consistent as possible, ideally to the point where the other person begins to question their own consistency. Maybe this makes no sense, but this is my first blog post and I have a hangover. The idea is there.