Archive for October, 2005

Review of Battlestar Galactica Season 1 DVD

Let’s start with the packaging. Season one comes as a 5-disc set, the first of which contains the minseries, with the other four discs containing the 13 season one episodes. The outer container is of a sleeve design, containing five smaller, “slim”-type DVD containers. Imagine the thickness of a slim-CD case, but the lenghth/width of a standard DVD case.

Began watching the miniseries on the night of October 30th, and made it some hour and ten minutes in, before finding it necessary to break to give our 17 month old a bath. Having seen all of Seasons One and Two on Sci-Fi as they aired (courtesy of TIVO), but not the miniseries, the miniseries sure fills in some gaps, and while similar in concept to the 1978 series pilot, the circumstances surrounding the Galactica itself are quite different.

The remake version opens as the Battlestar Galactica being readied for decommissioning, after more than forty years since the last Cylon was seen. Like the original, the Galactica was one of 12 ships, one for each colony, with Galactica representing Caprica. Under the remake, however, it is simply represented that the Galactica was the last of her class in service, now some 50 years old. In the original, the other eleven were destroyed during the Cylon sneak-attack, the Galactica only escaping because it left to check on Caprica.

The civilian government’s representative to the decommissioning is the Education Secretary, Laura Roslin. Adama sees his son for the first time in two years, as a photo-op for the decommissioning, since Adama’s other son was killed in a Viper accident. The Younger Adama (”Apollo”) holds much resentment for his father over this event, blaming it on the Father’s expectation of the family following in his footsteps. (It is revealed in a later episode that the brother’s death was facilitated by one Lt. Kara Thrace, aka “Starbuck”) The tension between the two Adamas is palatable.

Apollo is tasked with flying Adama’s old Viper from years ago, which had been resurrected by Chief Tyrrell and his hangar staff. His duty is as the last flyby during the decommissioning ceremony.

While the Galactica’s main squadron is out, the Cylons have conspired to make a sneak attack on four of the colonial homeworlds with Nukes. Enter Dr. Gaius Baltar, who inadvertently is responsible for allowing a Cylon agent access to the Defense mainframe, publishing the Colonial positions to the Cylon fleet. The Cylons have developed a way of neutralizing the Colonial computers, and just such an attack on Galactica’s squadron leaves them sitting ducks, and they are all destroyed. Only the raptor with “Helo” and “Boomer” in it escapes, but is hit, loses fuel, and coasts its way back to Caprica.

Back on Galactica, they have been alerted as to the attack, and sound battlestations. The crew is surprised, thinking they had been decommissioned. All they had left on the ship were older Vipers meant for a musuem that had been made out of one of Galactica’s hangar bays. Chief Tyrrell and crew knock down the museum barriers, and move the relics into the active hangar bay in preparation for combat.

A standing order on prewar Galactica prevented the integration and networking of the computer systems, and this would serve to save the ship.

11-3-05: After a few days, I got through some more of the DVD, but not the whole way.

On Caprica, Boomer and Helo have landed amidst the mushroom clouds of Cylon nukes. Helo guards the ship while Boomer repairs their broken fuel line, and they find themselves surrounded by misplaced Capricans wanting a way off the planet. The space on their Raptor is limited, and after taking the children, they draw numbers for the remaining three spots. Helo recognizes the genius Dr. Gauis Baltar amongst the crowd, and offers up his seat so that Baltar may also escape. (This fills in the reason why Helo spent the first season-plus on Caprica)

On the ship now known as Colonial One (formerly Caprica flight 498), Secretary of Education Laura Roslin hears word that the President of the 12 Colonies of Kobol and the cabinet senior to her are dead. She summons a priest to administer the oath of office, the callsign of the ship changes to Colonial One.

On the Battlestar Galactica, a Cylon raid delivers three nukes at Galactica, two of which are destroyed prior to impact. The third takes out a major section of the ship, causing fires, but most of the radiation is avoided. A major command decision has to be made on extinguishing the fire, one that could cost the lives of many men. XO Tigh is forced to make the decision, and after a few seconds hesitation, saves the ship by ordering the sealing off of the section, and venting to space. Chief Tyrrell argued for more time to get more men out, that simply 40 seconds more would have worked to get most all of them out.

Colonial One (Roslin) wants the Galactica to help them rescue survivors after Adama had decided to regroup at Ragnor station for resupply. Just then a Cylon raider appears over Colonial One, which survives due to an instinctive trick by Captain Lee Adama to fake out the Cylon.

whose curse is next to be broken?

With the White Sox exorcising their curse of the black sox last night, beating the Astros 1-0 to complete a sweep, in winning their first series since 1917, on the heels of the Red Sox ridding themselves of “the curse” last year (they had last won the year after the White Sox, 1918), the question presents itself, which curses or streaks of futility are left?

Worst of the list has to be the Cubbies, who last won the series in 1908. Beyond that have to be the Indians and the Giants

Never won:
Houstoun, Montreal/Washington, Seattle, Milwaukee Brewers, Tampa Bay, Texas Rangers/2nd Washington Senators, San Diego, Colorado

97 - Chicago Cubs
81 - Washington Senators * (Records should be with Minnesota though)
57 - Cleveland Indians
51 - SF/NY Giants (As NY Giants)
26 - Pittsburgh
25 - Philidelphia Philles
23 - St. Louis Cardinals
22 - Baltimore Orioles
21 - Detroit
20 - Kansas City Royals
19 - NYMets
17 - Los Angeles/Brooklyn Dodgers
16 - Oakland/Kansas City/Philadelphia A’s
15 - Cincinnati
14 - Minnesota Twins/1st Washington Senators
12 - Toronto
10 - Atlanta/Milwaukee/Boston Braves
5 - NYYankees
4 - Arizona
3 - Anaheim
2 - Florida
1 - Boston
0 - Chicago White Sox

It should be noted that MLB on its website separates the multiple city teams into separate ones, while at the same time shows all the historical record for each. For example, theirt records pages include the 1901-1960 Washington Senators as part of the Minnesota Twins, and counts the 1925 series win as one of 3 for the Twins, when the Twins themselves only won in 1987 & 1991.

I did not take the trouble to splitting the A’s or the Braves out. And I can’t believe how few titles the Phillies have won.

Is it time for the line-item veto?

Virginia Senator (and former Va Governor) George Allen was on Hannity yesterday (Monday) afternoon (what little bit I head of it amongst sports stations), and he was advocating anew a constitutional amendment to give the line-item veto to Presidents on spending bills.

Right now, the purse is in the hands of Congress. All the President can do is say yes or no to their spending bills — if he says no, it will be spun to say he’s against this program or that program or some other program he may actually support. The President often gets the blame for the country spending so much, when in reality he has very little control at all.

Congress has for decades taken advantage of the spot Presidents are put in by cramming these omnibus spending bills with pet projects and other measures unrelated to the spending to get them through when they otherwise could not.

Giving the President a line item veto to do something that Congress should be doing already is not a step to be taken lightly. In one sense, I would be against it, for Congress (and the media and the People) could then rightly blame the President for any spending since he would have had the opportunity to say no. On the other hand, the Presidential veto carries a heavy burden to override — and I don’t know that the left will want to give up that power to a republican president.

In the abstract theory, the current system should work. It is apparent it does not, as Bush 43 has not vetoed anything in his near 5 years in office. Granted, his party has been in control of both houses during most all that time, so instances should have been far and few. I for one would have liked to see McCain-Feingold vetoed, but we all know where that went…. straight to SCOTUS.

Congress themselves are each out to bring their own jurisdiction back more and more money. Big names such as Rostenkowski, Byrd, Murtha and Shuster come to mind as MCs that brought large chunks home, and now many things are named after them in their respective states.

The failure last week of the Coburn amendment, which would have axed the $220M bridge to nowhere in Alaska (a 5 mile bridge to an island with a population of 50 to replace a ferry) in favor of rebuilding a major bridge down in Louisiana post Katrina, by a whopping 84-15 tells us there is a long way to go to get to fiscal sanity. If we can’t get more than 15 votes in the senate, getting 67 for a constitutional amendment is going to be damn near impossible.

(See redstate chronicle of the Coburn amendment from last week: http://www.redstate.org/story/2005/10/20/154945/43)

Steelers handle Bengals on the road 27-13

The Steelers took a step toward regaining the top spot in the AFC North by defeating the previously 5-1 Bengals in Cincinnati to close within a half-game of first place in the north, even in the loss column.

The Steelers survived two red-zone trips by Cincinnati in the 1st quarter only giving up 3 points, and quickly responded in the 2nd quarter with a Touchdown drive led by QB Ben Roethlisberger. Tight End Heath Miller was the prime target on this drive, and it was Miller who was the recipient of a 3 yard TD pass from Roethlisberger.

The officiating seemed heavily biased against Pittsburgh in this game, but they did make the right call on a Pittsburgh challenge of an apparent Cincinnati touchdown on the Bengals’ first posession. The receiver had been out of bounds with his forearm before getting his second foot down, but the official on the field had ruled touchdown. The Bengals dropped a potential TD on the next play, and then missed a 30 yard field goal wide left.

The Bengals scored to make it 7-6 shortly before halftime, aided by some more questionable personal foul calls on the Steelers defense. The most glaring was one where the defender simply tackled the receiver, yet was called for unnecessary roughness.

The third quarter, however, belonged to the Steelers. They scored a 27-yard field goal after a stalled drive following an interception return to the Bengals 15. They quickly got the ball back from the Bengals on a Kimo Von Oelhoffen tipped pass that defensive lineman Aaron Smith caught. The Steelers made quick work, capped off by a 37 yard touchdown run by Willie Parker to make it 17-6. Jerome Bettis found some heavy work during the following Steelers drive to extend the lead to 24-6 on a Hines Ward touchdown as the quarter expired. (Hines had been shaken up on a pass in the end-zone earier in the drive, on a play that it appeared he had possession and both feet, before dropping the ball when he hit the ground)

Jeff Reed added a 39 yard field goal in the fourth quarter as the Steelers did nothing but run. Willie Parker secured his 100 yard game on this drive, emphatically going from 98 yards to 129 on two plays. Verron Haynes would come in on the next possession, and after some good runs, fumbled just outside the Cincinnati 20 yard line. The Bengals would take the ball all the way down, but got the benefit of a long “completion” where the receiver got one foot before falling out of bounds, but was awared the catch. This being just before the two minute warning, Steelers coach Bill Cowher, who had won his lone challenge in the 1st quarter, did not challenge (much to the chagrin of the crowd at Brittany’s in Woodbridge) and the play stood. The Bengals would score to close to within two touchdowns, but their onside kick attempt was unsuccessful, as Hines Ward recovered.

The hooplah coming into this game was Bengals QB Carson Palmer having nine straight games with a QB rating of 100.0 or greater — he fell far short today, finishing with a rating of 53.8, or 100.0 points short of Perfect. Roethlisberger was 9 for 14 with 2 TDs and one INT, his first of the season. The Steelers defense promptly got that one right back, with a Chris Hope interception of Carson Palmer in the 3rd quarter, returned to the Bengals 15. Ben’s rating was 93.2, and he still leads the NFL in passer rating to this point of the season.

Up next for the Stillers are the Baltimore Ravens, who come to Pittsburgh on a monday night Halloween game.

Bowyer wins at Memphis Motorsports Park

Running thread for the Busch race at Memphis, the fourth race from the end of the season. At this point, Truex has a 120 point lead over Clint Bowyer, and only the top four drivers are still mathematically alive for the title.

Bowyer started deep in the field, overcoming a spin during qualifying, and raced to the lead midway through the race. Bowyer ended up winning, leading the most laps, while Truex finished 3rd. Although Truex also led, the finish order was enough to cut Truex’s lead from 120 to 100 with 3 races to go. Next up is Texas after a week off, then Phoenix and Homestead. At this point last season, Truex was up some 300 points on current Nextel cup rookie Kyle Busch.

Long story short, with 3 races to go, the max number points per race is 190 for a win leading the most laps. Over 3 races, that is 570 max points. The minimum points for last place (43rd position) is 34 points, or 102 points. Bowyer being down 100 is guaranteed at least 102 points if he starts all three races, but so is Truex. So the max that matters over three races is 468, and Bowyer is already 100 behind, so Truex can clinch by gaining 368 points over Bowyer. Averaged over three races, this is 123 points per race net, or such that scoring 157 points per race, or a 4th place finish without leading or 5th with leading a lap, and Truex wins no matter what Bowyer does.

The third and fourth place drivers, Carl Edwards and Reed Sorensen, are 371 and 429 points behind respectively. This means that Truex need only gain 97 and 39 points respectively to eliminate those two drivers from contention, something that can happen in the next race.

Film Review: Blue Sunshine

You thought Nancy Reagan was joking, didn’t you?

Synopsis: A bunch of yuppies who were friends in college are at a party one night, when one of the men at the party complains of a migraine. A few moments later, a woman grabs his hair and it all slides off.

blue_9.jpg

That’s right, most of his hair slides right off his head, leaving just a few straggling hairs at the temples. He runs from the room holding his head, and everyone wonders if it was some kind of weird joke. A few minutes later the man returns, his eyes bugged out, and goes on a homocidal, superhuman rampage — pushing three women into a raging fireplace to burn to death. He then chases his friend into the forest, and his friend manages to escape. The bald maniac dies in a car crash, and his friend is blamed for the murders.

Our hero then rushes about, trying to evade the police and ‘get to the bottom’ of his friend’s weird breakdown. Other yuppies go crazy as well, and we finally discover what they all had in common. They all attended the same college at the same time, and they all used an LSD called ‘Blue Sunshine’. As it turns out ‘Blue Sunshine’ lays dormant in your system for about ten years, and then you suffer migraines, go slowly crazy, and then the alopecia sets in (yes, I looked it up). Then you kill everyone in sight, and kill yourself (homocidal maniacs are clumsy, it seems).

Continue reading ‘Film Review: Blue Sunshine’

The travesty that was Charlotte

NASCAR had 14 cautions during the 300 mile Busch series race Friday night, almost all on tire problems, with many hard crashes. Two of the top winning drivers this year, points leader Tony Stewart and Greg Biffle, both crashed twice in testing here a few weeks back.

You would think that would be a red flag, after the spring race at Charlotte featured a NASCAR record 22 caution periods.

Despite all the prior problems this year and this past weekend, NASCAR ran the race anyway, and paid for it with 15 cautions, almost all courtesy to tire problems, including Tony Stewart yet again, Rusty Wallace, Ryan Newman, Matt Kenseth among the chasers, and Dale Earnhardt Jr, Kevin Harvick, and Elliott Sadler among those outside the top 10. Stewart at 6 laps down after his crash into the outside wall managed to finish 25th, a testament to how many other cars had problems.

There was not a single set of green-flag stops — as no green flag run lasted longer than 23 laps. 23 laps! They could have dispensed with the rest of the race and simply held a 20-lap shootout for all the 500 mile race was worth.

NASCAR would have done well to postpone the event, but instead risked the safety and lives of the drivers by continuing with the race.

Rel’s take on Miers

I still don’t know enough.

And while I have great deference to President Bush, and faith that he will fulfill his promise to appoint originalists in the mold of Scalia and Thomas, I am not sold on Miers. But likewise, I can’t say I oppose her as much as I harbor some disappointment in those who could have been…

Miers’ responses to the questionnaire from the Judiciary Committee were released yesterday. NRO has them posted in PDF format. There is nothing in the answers that screams “VOTE HER DOWN NOW”. The answers don’t completely alleviate the concerns I might have, or my prior disappointment for those not picked for this slot.

This quip over on Redstate today might say it best:

QUOTE(Erick@Redstate)
The President believes that Miers will satisfy the conservative base. “He hasn’t sold out and all the rhetoric that he is not a conservative is bull[ ],” I’m told. Miers, says he, if she can get on the Court, would side with the right on the parental consent issue. That’s the only major abortion case on the horizon right now except possibly partial birth abortion and, again, she’d more likely than not side with the right.

More importantly, Miers will be a better business conservative than O’Connor, I’m told. She has a business background and enough practical experience to not only persuade academics on the Court, but also to write reasonable, easy to understand opinions.

I’m told that the White House has the votes. “There’ll be some in the party who oppose her, but they’ll never vote against her on the floor,” says he. “It’s a long time till 2008, for them to oppose Bush now.” He says that the senators most likely to oppose her (and he thinks Brownback, Kyl, and Coburn are three of them) will make a lot of noise, but will in the end let her through.

http://www.redstate.org/story/2005/10/19/83615/279

Perhaps Bush knows something we don’t, in that there is another vacancy on the near horizon, say next June at the end of OT 2005. He knows that if Miers votes against the right that he will pay a huge price for it. One has to think this is in the calculation. And one has to think that if Miers knew she could not side with the right, she, based on her friendship with Bush, should not have accepted. The early speculation for the next vacancy would be 85 year old John Paul Stevens, which, if replaced with a Bork, Luttig, Alito, McConnell, Jones, etc., would really be a meaningful shift.

Miers, at best, seems just slightly to the right of O’Connor, but not quite all the way over. Granted, similar was thought on Clarence Thomas prior to his nomination. And Souter was thought to be rock solid. It’s this crap-shoot nature in court picks that has the right in a frenzy over the stealth trend.

Pens lose 3-1 to Lightning

In the first of several correspondent reports from live game attending is this one from last Saturday, October 15, 2005, at Pittsburgh’s Mellon Arena.

It was good to see hockey back, and this game marked a standing room only sell-out of 17,132 fans. The game started off well enough for the Pens, holding Tampa to only 6 shots in the first period, but managed to trail 1-0 after 1.

The 2nd period might have well been dubbed “lets keep the pens in the box” period, as the Pens spent much of the period shorthanded. It was during one of those penalties that a Tampa player committed what should have been called a high sticking penalty, where his stick struck Pens player Mark Recchi in the face. 10 seconds later, Tampa scores on the Powerplay to go up 2-0. Tampa added a third goal in the last minute of the 2nd period to end the period up 3-0.

The Pens owned the third period, but could not manage more than a single goal in the first few minutes from Ziggy Palffy, assisted by Sidney Crosby. The goal extended the point-streaks of both players, now to 6 games for Crosby to start his career, ringing in at 2g, 7a on the season. The Recchi-Palffy-Crosby line has worked out really well so far, and was the best line for the Pens in the game. The Malone-LeClair-Lemieux line got to that point in the third period, but it was too little too late.

OVERALL OBSERVATIONS:
The crackdown against the trap was not successful in this game, as Tampa trapped all game long. The penalty calls were one-sided, and the missed calls or bad calls energized the fans in a way the Igloo had not seen in ages. The Pens will get better and win games, as evidenced by their comeback against the Flyers the night before, when they were down 5-1 in the 2nd before tying the game at 5 with 8 mins to go in regulation. Through six games, they have lost twice, but this loss was much better than their opening 5-1 loss at New Jersey.

And the place is infant friendly, and ours had fun, was awake the whole time, and has added “hockey” and “lee mooo” to her vocabulary…

Film Review: When A Stranger Calls

Synopsis: This was an interesting movie that brings to the screen the classic urban legend of the babysitter who receives vaguely threatening phone calls. Carol Kane (she was in ‘Transylvania 6500′ as Igor’s wife, yeah her) is the babysitter, and she delivers some fairly decent acting.

Continue reading ‘Film Review: When A Stranger Calls’




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