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Posts Tagged: quotes

"We have a crisis of leadership in America because our overwhelming power and wealth, earned under earlier generations of leaders, made us complacent, and for too long we have been training leaders who only know how to keep the routine going. Who can answer questions, but don’t know how to ask them. Who can fulfill goals, but don’t know how to set them. Who think about how to get things done, but not whether they’re worth doing in the first place. What we have now are the greatest technocrats the world has ever seen, people who have been trained to be incredibly good at one specific thing, but who have no interest in anything beyond their area of exper­tise. What we don’t have are leaders."

- From Solitude and Leadership, a lecture given by William Deresiewicz to the plebe class at West Point in October 2009

After occupying my Instapaper for nearly two months, I finally read this (originally seen on Kottke). It is excellent, and definitely worth your time.

He talks about the inefficiency of multitasking, and I am attempting to regain an ability to focus and concentrate. I’ve seen this issue noted numerous times, but habits are difficult to break. When I take a class now, and even when I was in college, it doesn’t seem I am retaining information in the way I did when I was younger.

Otherwise, it’s a reminder of what leadership really is and that individuals in leadership positions don’t necessarily attain those for the right abilities.

Read it!

Source: theamericanscholar.org

"Here’s what you need to know, about life in general: any place that refuses to sell you a burger under medium temperature, is basically on the side of the terrorists."

- Anthony Bourdain in the New York, NY episode of The Layover

"Do not put unauthorized cinnamon on the goddamn meeting table! That’s all the fuck we need."

-

Dan Dority in the Deadwood episode Unauthorized Cinnamon

I finished Deadwood a couple weeks ago and I think that’ll be the end of gorging on past TV shows for the moment. Deadwood is an excellent show, but an ever so minor step below the following shows I truly love: The Wire, Breaking Bad, Mad Men, Freaks and Geeks and Community. However, the show was hitting its stride for me and had the potential to ascend if it hadn’t been cancelled due to HBO office politics. It’s definitely worth watching even with the limp and impotent ending, but it could of, and should of, been so much more.

Seeing Deadwood after Justified is interesting, because of the similarity in Timothy Olyphant’s characters in each. I may actually enjoy Justified more at this point, but I have more admiration for Deadwood. As with Boardwalk Empire or Mad Men, the quality execution of an intriguing period and setting is enthralling on its own.

Rating: 4/5

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I spend a great deal of my time consuming media. Considering the amount of time devoted to this pursuit, it seems only natural to record my thoughts here. Often I see something truly fantastic and then let it slip off into the ether. I’m going to change that now, starting with 13 Assassins, Breaking Bad and The Wire.



“If you value your life, you’ll die a dog’s death.”


13 Assassins

Before 13 Assassins, the Takashi Miike films I’d seen were Audition, Visitor Q and Three… Extremes (this is actually three shorts with only one his). These certainly aren’t for everyone, and I doubt I’ll ever watch any of them again. Audition is my favorite of the three by far, with Visitor Q being too bizarre and his short “Box” in Three… Extremes being so forgettable I can’t recall anything about it (siamese twins?).

I heard nothing but good things about 13 Assassins and its nearly hour-long final battle. It didn’t disappoint. The premise is that a group of 13 samurais are enlisted to kill a sadistic lord, who is the brother of the current Shogun and son to the former. You truly despise the villain and his continued arrogance fuels your desire for his downfall. The final battle is exceptionally well done. It doesn’t suffer from hyper-editing or too many close-ups that cause action scenes to become incoherent messes. So, see it! Also, TOTAL MASSACRE.

Rating: 4/5



“So no matter what I do, hooray for me because I’m a great guy? It’s all good? No matter how many dogs I kill, I just, what, do an inventory and accept?!”


Breaking Bad

Jesse Pinkman, you break my heart. This show has been, and continues to be, phenomenal. It’s beautifully shot; it constantly rends my heart; badassery abound. I love it and I’m overjoyed it now has a defined end point so it can be planned out thoroughly and avoid pulling a Lost (or a Weeds for that matter). Don’t let me down!

Rating: 5/5 for the first three seasons and all of season four so far (through nine episodes).



“How you expect to run with the wolves come night, when you spend all day sparring wit’ the puppies?”


The Wire

By my estimation The Wire is the most critically acclaimed television show… ever. I put off starting this show despite the critical acclaim, constant love and references to Stringer Bell I never understood because of the commitment. 60ish hours is a long time, and full-hour shows on HBO feel daunting (it is compared to that 42-47 minute stuff!).

Everyone was/is right. The show lives up to the hype and then some. Before starting The Wire, I’d watched the first season of Treme (and quit shortly into season two) and Generation Kill. Treme became not worth the effort, and Generation Kill was good but not great. These experiences with David Simon left me wondering if I’d feel lukewarm about The Wire too.

I started with The Corner, since I heard it was sort of the predecessor to The Wire. It was good, and seeing the real individuals it was based on at the end brought it all together. I’ve watched the first four seasons of The Wire, with discs one and two of season five coming on Monday. Omar Little is my favorite character because of quotes like the one above (he must be everyone’s favorite, right?). The show does an excellent job of feeling realistic, and showing the warts of every character. No one feels two-dimensional. The characters are actually too warty to be realistic in my view, but maybe people in the Baltimore area are just terrible.

Rating: 5/5 so far, but you’ve already seen it all anyway.



This post was waaaaaaaaaaaaaay late. I watched 13 Assassins as Hurricane Irene was passing over, and I wanted to make this post shortly after. Oh well, better late than never.

"A study published in The Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin says that people are pretty useless at judging whether or not they are good looking. Apparently, people typically think they are 20% better looking than they really are."

-

Shit! I guess that means when I think I’m looking gross I’m looking REALLY terrible to everyone else.

The New York Times via Brainmail

Source: brainmail.nowandnext.com