The Distraction Free iPhone

Curtis McHale posted a review of a Medium article by Jake Knapp on going six years with a distraction free iPhone. I think the most important bit from the article is Knapp’s realization that a distraction free iPhone is a competitive advantage.

Here’s the thing: When I stopped instantly reacting to everyone else’s priorities, I got better at making time for the projects I believed were most important—even if they weren’t urgent or nobody was asking for them. I invested effort in documenting and promoting my design sprint process. And, after a lifetime of putting it off till someday,” I finally started writing, eventually publishing two books.
I think I want something like this, but I’m not sure. I’m going to keep thinking about this.

More

Josh Spector with the only way to get more next year –

More curiosity.

More confidence.

More commitment.

More connecting.

More focus.

More optimism.

More saying no.

More doing.

That’s how you’ll get more of what you want next year.

The Comic Book Movie Illusion

Tim Grierson, in his review of Aquaman in MEL magazine, has an interesting take on super-hero films

But ultimately, this is what’s so hard about silly superhero films. In a sense, they’re owning up to a fundamental fact about comic-book movies — which is that, honestly, they’re all kinda dumb. People who can fly or lift heavy things or climb buildings? It’s total fantasy — but part of the reason that these stories work is that we emotionally invest in such universal tales of heroism and self-sacrifice. They’re goofy movies that we choose to treat seriously — if we acknowledged their idiocy, the whole illusion would come crashing down.
Of course, the genre is fantasy so making a fantasy movie is kinda the point. Grierson thinks they are goofy. He thinks they are goofy because of the genre, which he mostly dislikes. Most professional critics actively dislike genre films. Audiences love them. Critics want real stories.” Audiences want a fun time at the theater.

Sure, there is plenty of room for everything, and to be fair Grierson did put Annihilation and Mission: Impossible — Fallout in his top ten and those do fall under fantasy. However, his universal tales of heroism and self-sacrifice” apply to all sorts of genre films from Westerns to Romantic Comedies.

Basically, I wish he’d acknowledge the idiocy and fantasy of ALL genre films and maybe even a few of the non-genre types too.

I Ain’t Braggin’

Michael Berns at The Champaign Room has a superb look back at the last five years of the annual Illinois versus Missouri Braggin’ Rights games. Illinois is on a five-game run of victories, but I’m just not sure this year’s team is going to get the win. No matter who wins, I’ll be having a great time.

Over the last few years, there has been a March Madness atmosphere prior to tipoff, and I anticipate it getting crazier with several players on the Mizzou squad committed/decommitted/transferred from the Fighting Illini.

Of course, I’ll be there cheering on the team.

The Complicated Relationships in Love Actually Visualized

Amanda Shendruk at Quartz did a nice deep dive into Love Actually with a wonderful diagram of all the relationships in the movie from family, friends, lovers, lusters, and employee/employer.

It’s pretty good, but it misses the friendship between Mark and Mia, Colin and Tony, and John and Judy working for Colin. Plus, we don’t see the romance/lust between Colin, Stacey, Jeanie, Harriet, and Carol-Anne or the one between Tony and Carla. It also misses the lust between the US President and Natalie.

Happiness is a Choice

Hugh MacLeod and Gaping Void have a great newsletter. Occasionally, he drops some good stuff. This is a great one linking to a study about happiness and being responsible for it yourself.

Buddha once said that Life is suffering”. He didn’t say that most of our suffering is self-inflicted. Or if he did, that part was mostly lost on us mere mortals.

Happiness is not just the result of good fortune and good brain chemicals. Happiness is also part of being responsible for your own experience. Indeed.

The Return of the Light

One can’t go wrong subscribing to The Mission’s newsletter. I appreciate the stories most of all. The one below is from their last one of 2018. Happy Winter Solstice!

A young boy stood in a crowd. He held the hand of his father and his small fingers squeezed his Dad’s palm. His father smiled and gave the boy’s hand two quick squeezes back. As they walked, the young boy peeked his head in between the hips of strangers, moving his head left and right, hoping to get a better look at the early-morning event.

It was too hard for him to see, so the father bent down to the small boy.

“Is it time yet?” the boy asked.

“Not yet, but soon it will be,” said his father.

“Why does it take so long?”

“Quiet,” the father said gently, It is time you be patient and watch what is happening before you.”

The young boy and his father moved to an open space. His father put a finger to his lips to signal silence and the boy nodded. They stood in a clearing in the plaza and awaited the sunrise.

The boy knew little about why the people of his village gathered before the sunrise on this particular day. He had asked before, but no answer was given, so the mystery remained.

Finally, on this day, the boy’s father had told him he would find the answer. As the crowd stood in silent anticipation, the boy spoke again.

“But Father, why are we all here?” His father knelt down.

“Why must you talk during the ceremony, young one? Through the experience, you will learn the meaning.”

“Yes, but I don’t know why we stand to wait for the sun. It greets us every day, and yet for the last three days we haven’t eaten. And now we’re awake so early to wait for it?”

The father bent down on one knee, cupping the child’s face in his hands.

“Fine! I can tell you want answers, and maybe they will make this sunrise as meaningful as it should be. This is why we wait…”

The father explained that for three days, the Incas fast in preparation for the rising of the sun on this particular day. Once the sun rises, the crowd will crouch and kneel before it. Then two cups of chicha, a sacred beer made from corn will be offered as homage to the sun. The cup on the left will remain as an offer for the Sun, while the cup on the right will be shared amongst the Sapa Inca, the emperor of the Inca Empire, and his retinue.

Finally, the sun rose over the Andes. The people knelt with their golden cups and celebrated as Inti Raymi Rata had begun.

Soon the sun rose higher in the sky. The young boy watched in fascination as a mirror positioned in the piazza caught the sun’s rays and directed them to ignite a fire. This was the young boy’s favorite part. He liked the smell of brush and grass burning. It reminded him of the soups his mother made during supper, a time he always looked forward to when the darkness of night fell upon the land.

He looked at his father and he smiled. His father grinned, It is important that you remember, young one, that this is a celebration of light, of a new beginning this time of year. Not all darkness is forever, and we remember that it passes by celebrating the light.”

The boy nodded his head in agreement one last time and replayed his father’s words in his head.

Since before recorded history, cultures around the world have hosted ceremonies like the Inti Raymi Rata to celebrate the return of the sun. This celebration signifies an appreciation of time, light, and new beginnings and takes place on the shortest day of the year - a day we know as the winter solstice.

Everyone faces dark periods in their lives - times where the seconds feel like hours and the darkness grows like a storm cloud over your life. Sometimes we forget that darkness will always end. When we forget this, the darkness can turn into fear, hate, and resentment. It can overwhelm us.

Enduring the darkness can be a powerful lesson, but it does not have to control us.

When we find ourselves in darkness, we can choose to go about our business like normal.

Or we can choose to make a point to get out and wait for the sun to rise. Light will always be present when we look for it. But it takes training and focus to wait for the light. It might take three days of fasting, getting up early on the winter solstice, and sacrificing those extra cups of holiday cheer you might want this holiday season. It might take getting up extra early to go out and wait for the sunrise.

The Incas remind us that holiday celebrations can be as simple as waiting for the return of the light.

For many cultures, the winter solstice signifies the beginning of a rebirth and a chance to start over again. What if we could stand in our own darkness and happily wait for the daybreak?

Darkness will always exist in our world, but remember that the sun will always rise.

Soon, the rays of light will emerge over the mountains, or through the clouds. When those rays come into focus they are strong enough to light fires.

When the winter or the darkness feel long, remember… the sun will return. We can stay mired in the darkness, or happily await and celebrate the return of the light. 

The 10 Best Saturday Night Live Sketches of 2018

Matthew Love writing in Vulture outlines his picks for the ten best Saturday Night Live sketches of 2018. I watched nearly every episode this past season and he’s spot on with his list.

Home Alone Again

Macauley Culkin is certainly having some fun these days. Here he is as a grown up Kevin McCallister, but not quite alone anymore since Google Assistant is there.

The Most 2018 Photos Ever

Alan Taylor, in The Atlantic, has curated 32 photos designed to capture…

Not necessarily the top photos of the year, nor the most heart-wrenching or emotional images, but a collection of photographs that are just so 2018. From Gritty the Philadelphia Flyers mascot to Fortnite tournaments, from the airplane taken for a tragic joyride at Sea-Tac Airport to a caravan of thousands journeying through Mexico to the United States, from the mandarin duck to Knickers the steer, and much more. This is 2018.
A great collection and one I had to sit back and remind myself that all of this really did happen in the last 12 months and not the last 12 years.

A Long Talk with Lin-Manuel Miranda

I really enjoyed Chris Smith’s interview in Vulture with Lin-Manuel Miranda. His comments on Trump, Hamilton, and his future creative endeavors were refreshing.

Remove.bg

This is a pretty cool online tool I learned about on Laughing Squid.

Remove.bg is a free service that removes background images from photos in five seconds or less. The site employs a clever API that determines and separates foreground from the discarded background. The only caveat at this time is that it only works on photos with people or faces.

I’m sure there are plenty of examples how this could be useful.

What Does the 2018 Vote Say About 2020?

Kevin Drum was wondering what the 2018 vote totals might mean in 2020. Luckily, Nate Silver had a similar thought and created a pretty cool map of the 2018 Congressional Popular Vote by Party and Converted to Electoral Votes.

What caught my eye aside from Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin hopefully turning back blue, was what Drum said about this whole political landscape.

This is all part and parcel of my belief that Donald Trump was something of a fluke and Republicans know perfectly well that they’re demographically doomed. It’s true that a lot of people—including me—have been saying this for a long time, and it’s continued not to come true. So why should it come true now? That’s simple: the non-white share of the population really does keep going up and Trump has now irreparably identified Republicans as the party of white racism. It’s hard for me to see him winning in 2020, and it’s hard for me to see the Republican Party winning much of anything for the decade after that. Somehow they need to reinvent themselves as a conservative party sans racism, and that’s going to take a while.

I want to believe, but I just don’t know.

What Do You Know?

Alan Jacobs wrote an incredible post about the state of our politics. He echoes a lot of what I believe to be not only the failings of our political body, but how to even describe it.

If you’re running for office, I couldn’t care less how old you are — unless you’re over 80, in which case actuarial issues kick in. What I care about is this: What do you know? Can you summon to mind the general outlines of the Constitution of the United States? Are you aware of any distinctive, or especially controversial, laws of the state you live in? If you were to be elected to office, can you make a reasonable guess at the legal and political issues that are likely to confront you, and how they are affected by existing laws? Do you understand that there’s no hate speech” exception to the First Amendment? Do you understand how Facebook makes money? Do you grasp why a rogue employee can’t tinker with Google’s algorithms to punish conservatives? Have you seen, and do you comprehend, the evidence for anthropogenic climate change? What do you know? 

People sometimes refer to the Trump administration as an idiocracy: rule by the idiotic. I don’t think that’s quite right, first because Trump has a certain serpentine cunning, but also because the idiot, etymologically, is the private person, the person in his own world. Idiots don’t run for office, neither do they vote.

Others call the current regime a kakistocracy: rule by the worst. It’s a reasonable designation. The more I have thought about it the more convinced I have become that Americans elected as their President the single most comprehensively disqualified public figure for the job: a man disqualified by temperament, by character, by inexperience, by vulnerability to blackmail — and by sheer ignorance.

And it’s that last point that makes me want to call the current regime by a different name: it is, I think, an agnoiocracy — rule by the ignorant. Rule by know-nothings. Most of the people who voted for Trump are not as crassly venal as he is, but they tend to be equally ignorant. It was their ignorance (or denial — it amounts to the same thing) of the facts of our political order that made them think that Trump could be a successful president, and their ignorance of Trump’s non-televised history that made them think that he could be trusted to keep any promise that is not in his direct interest to keep.

When children are small they make messes, and they do so because they’re ignorant. It’s not their fault: they haven’t been around very long, they don’t have a lot of experience with cause and effect. So they pour orange juice on the carpet, and take Sharpies to the walls — leaving messes for their parents and other guardians to clean up.

Our infantile agnoiocracy — and I include in it the legislative as well as the executive branch, and Democrats as well as Republicans — is making enormous messes that later on we’ll all have to clean up, if we can. And that’s why, from now on, when I’m looking at people running for office, the chief question I’ll be asking will not involve their positions on issues. I’ll ask: What do you know? Have you sufficiently remedied your natural ignorance that you are unlikely to make messes as big as the ones we’re now faced with?

The Unseen and the Unspoken

The unseen and the unspoken may be some of the most powerful forces in your life. See if you can sense them.”

– Michael Wade

Penny Marshall, RIP

Dave Pell has my favorite short bio of Penny Marshall, who passed away today at 75.

She directed Big and Awakenings. She was the first woman to direct a film that grossed more than $100 million, the first woman to direct two films that grossed more than $100 million, and she was only the second woman director to see her film Oscar-nominated for best picture.” But before all that, she was Laverne.

Glitter Bomb

Mark Rober is a former NASA engineer.

Someone stole a package from me. Police wouldn’t do anything about it so I spent the last 6 months engineering up some vigilante justice. Revenge is a dish best served fabulously.
He spent a lot of time figuring out and testing his fake package. It included an accelerometer, GPS, four phone cameras tripped to turn on and stream video to the cloud when the box was opened, a beautiful glitter bomb cloud and the pièce de résistance… fart spray that turned on regularly so the porch thief would then throw the package away.

I venture to say if he could mass produce these packages, they would sell like crazy. Also, fart spray is apparently something you can actually buy and not from Wile E Coyote’s ACME Corporation.

Adam Sandler Tribute to Chris Farley

December 18, 2018, marks the anniversary of the late, great comedian Chris Farley’s death. I know this because Adam Sandler paid tribute to his friend in his Netflix special 100% Fresh. There is so much good entertainment out there; I simply cannot follow or see it all. So, with a modicum of regret I had no idea Adam Sandler even had a new stand-up special.

Smartly, Netflix shared the video clip via YouTube, and now everyone is laughing/crying.

Chris Farley isn’t really gone. He’s living in a van down by the river of souls.

Ugly Sweater Party

It would suck if you got invited to an ugly sweater party and it turned out it was only for people who are ugly and sweat a lot.