Saturday five, 2/21/15.

My only new baseball post in the last week was last Saturday’s post on draft prospects Kyle Funkhouser, Kyle Tucker, and Jake Woodford; my trip this weekend didn’t happen because USAirways cancelled my outbound flight and couldn’t get me to Santa Barbara in time. I did hold a Klawchat on Thursday.

saturdayfiveMy latest boardgame review for Paste was on Evolution, one of the bigger Kickstarter boardgame success stories (non-Exploding Kittens division). I’ll have another piece for them next week, summarizing my afternoon at Toyfair NYC earlier this week.

I’ve also been thrilled by all of your reactions and responses to my essay on my peculiar, obsessive reading habits. I’m still wading through them all, but please know that I’ve at least seen your comments even if I haven’t replied directly.

A lot of links this week…

  • First, an actual baseball piece: My friend Alex Speier has an outstanding article on Boston’s use of “neuroscouting” tools, like a computer program to measure a player’s hand-eye coordination. I’ve heard about this tool before, and I know a few other teams that use it or tools in the same vein, and while their competitive advantage is temporary (soon everyone except the Phillies will adopt it), it’s quite significant.
  • A fantastic BBC interview with actress Jamie Brewer, now the first woman with Down Syndrome to walk the catwalk at Fashion Week. Termination rates for fetuses diagnosed with Down Syndrome range from an estimated 67% in the US to over 90% in Europe, and of course that issue came up in the news recently with the story of the Armenian woman who divorced her New Zealand-born husband rather than keep their baby, born with Down Syndrome, although the precise details of that are unclear.
  • A longread from the New Yorker on the Apple industrial designer who might be the most important person in the company.
  • How Parks and Recreation got Bill Murray to play Mayor Gunderson. The final season has had its misses (the Johnny Karate episode), but the way they’ve circled back to every significant side character and still added more amazing guest appearances like this one has made it more than just a cursory victory lap, but a season worth remembering. If you’re a fan of the show, or just enjoyed the #humblebrag phenomenon, you should also read Aziz Ansari’s tribute to writer/comedian Harris Wittels, who died of an apparent drug overdose this week. Wittels, who also played Animal Control Brett on P&R, was just 30 years old.
  • This week in vaccination: Jeb Lund (aka @Mobute) has a superb piece in Rolling Stone on how vaccine deniers’ bad decisions hurt others, not themselves. Meanwhile, here in Delaware, my representative in our lower house is introducing a bill to tighten the “religious exemption” loophole in vaccination requirements. I think we should repeal that exemption entirely, but this is at least a good first step. Also, Forbes ran a great three-part piece debunking myths about vaccine deniers. I disagree with one thing – these people are pretty much all delusional idiots – but her points are crucial in the fight against such ignorance. One thing we can’t forget, though: Those of us who understand the facts that vaccines are safe and effective must keep speaking up, telling our representatives in government, our school boards, our principals, everyone in a position of authority that we want our children protected.
  • Oliver Sacks wrote a difficult-to-read (and probably more so to write) piece on learning his cancer has returned and metastasized.
  • Also from the NY Times, an op ed on how added vitamins paper over the low quality of our food supply.
  • Settlers of Catan: The Film! This is going to be terrible.
  • Two good pieces from the Washington Post. The first, from earlier this month, on how it’s never too early to teach children about boundaries, which I think might help not just with preventing abuse and molestation but might also reduce the pervasiveness of rape culture among young men. On a related note, the second piece, from this Thursday, discusses the abuse that’s driving some feminist writers offline. You know who’s a major culprit in this? Twitter. Their lack of enforcement of their own harassment policies is by far the worst thing about the site. You can quite literally threaten to rape or kill someone, directly @ their account, and face no consequences even just within the confines of the site itself. Come on, Twitter. Be better.
  • I agree wholeheartedly with this message, which refers to the movie The DUFF (Designated Ugly Fat Friend):

Comments

  1. Mike Anderson

    Harris Wittels played Harris from Animal Control on Parks and Rec (not Brett). I highly recommend his podcast appearance on You Made it Weird with Pete Holmes three months ago where he talked about his heroin addiction (http://www.nerdist.com/pepisode/you-made-it-weird-236-harris-wittels-returns/). It’s an incredibly frank and moving conversation. Drug addiction is a terrible disease.

  2. Remember the Settlers of Catan novel? http://goo.gl/RyNL9Z [Of course you don’t.]

    Also, Act I of this recent episode of This American Life (http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/545/if-you-dont-have-anything-nice-to-say-say-it-in-all-caps) addresses the issue of trolls attacking feminist writers, and one troll who actually apologized. Great listen.

  3. Mike Wendling

    Curious to hear your thoughts on over focusing on vaccine deniers and under focusing on those who aren’t vaccinated due to economic/education issues? I read somewhere that 98% of unvaccinated (sorry, no source) are due to econ/edu issues, not deniers. Shouldn’t we see more in the press about this?

    • Andrew Kaufman

      I would think it’s more of an education issue rather than socioeconomic. Most of the vaccine patents have long expired and the generic cost is negligible. In addition, for the indigent population, Medicaid covers these costs and the chargeback is also very low due to the fact that these measures are considered preventative care.

  4. I totally disagree with you about the Johnny Karate episode, KLaw. I think it was one of the funniest of the entire season. That being said, this season has been great and it’s nice to know the show is still in top (if not necessarily peak) form and won’t be limping to the finish line the way The Office and 30 Rock did (before the last handful of episodes of each picked up again).

  5. I tried getting through the Rolling Stone article on the anti-vaxxers but all I kept seeing was “F-bomb,” “F-bomb,” “F-bomb.” I don’t have much against swearing but it bothers me in print because it’s a distraction. I guess I’m getting old because this seems to be a recent writing style, maybe in the last 10 years or so that I noticed. But for me this Deadspinning of writing just really detracts from the message the author is trying to convey.

  6. Klaw! I’m a fan of your work on espn. I’m sorry to hear about your ordeal with US Airways. If you don’t mind me asking, which restaurants you were originally planning to visit in Santa Barbara? I go to UCSB and haven’t had much of an opportunity to explore the area and would appreciate any insight you may have.