My one piece for ESPN+ subscribers this week looked at some major names on the trade market this offseason. I also held a Klawchat on Friday.
I appeared on the Pros and Prose podcast to talk about Smart Baseball and other topics related to the book and reading/writing in general.
I’m back to sending out my free email newsletter every week to ten days or so, as the spirits move me. The spirits usually include rum, of course.
And now, the links…
- The Guardian long read looks at the new backlash against plastics, notably against the use and creation of plastic microbeads, which have quickly become pervasive in our environment.
- Bloomberg investigates how 7-Eleven is using ICE raids to battle its own franchisees, with lawsuits in both directions, all in the wake of the guilty plea of a Long Island franchisee in 2013 to wire fraud, harboring illegal immigrants, and stealing parts of their wages.
- Baltimore County used something called “exceptional clearance” to mark a statutory rape case as successfully closed despite failing to even charge the 29-year-old assailant, who went on to rape another underaged girl in Wisconsin. The practice is common across police departments nationwide.
- The Cut has the strange story of “The Watcher,” a stalker who hounded a family out of a million-dollar New Jersey house by writing threatening letters. The writer hasn’t been caught, while some neighbors indulged in conspiracy theories that the victims wrote the letters themselves.
- Kevin Alexander writes about the effect best-of lists can have on small restaurants after the burger joint he wrote was the best in the United States closed just five months after the list went up.
- Toronto Star reporter Daniel Dale has made it his mission to document all of the lies President Trump tells, amounting to thousands just since the vulgar talking yam took office. Dale writes in the Washington Post that fact-checking these lies is easy, since Trump tells the same lies over and over, and uses the same bad rhetorical devices when telling them. Dale also calls out U.S. news outlets for still falling for the same shit over and over again.
- The terms of the subsidies Amazon will receive for its two new headquarters locations are out, and they’re quite generous given how profitable the company is. What I have not seen yet is an analysis of whether, say, New York City would be better off if they took the $1 billion in subsidies they’re giving amazon and plowed it into a less exciting investment like upgrading its subway system. Meanwhile, NYC gave amazon land that would have gone to affordable housing instead.
- An L.A. musician concocted an elaborate scheme to schedule a European tour for his barely-real band, posing as a promoter, buying Facebook followers, and editing together concert footage to make it appear that his band was playing to big, raucous crowds.
- A 19-year-old woman won election to the New Hampshire legislature this month, two years after an old, white, male legislator mocked her efforts to raise the minimum age for marriage in the state (which, I must add, Republicans keep blocking).
- A 31-year-old speech therapist got so mad watching Betsy DeVos bumble through her confirmation hearings that she ran for the Superintendent of Schools job in Arizona as a Democrat – and won. She replaces Dingbat Diane Douglas, who wanted to introduce creationism into the public school science curriculum, and becomes the first Democrat in this job in over 25 years.
- This month’s Blue Wave in the Midwest could mean a 2007 agreement for midwestern states to reduce greenhouse gas emissions gets a new lease on life.
- Former naturopath Britt Hermes, who realized that naturopathy was bunk and blogs about bogus treatments in that field, won this year’s John Maddox Prize, given annually to one or two people for their efforts in standing up for science in the public sphere. She shared it with a researcher who documented the effects climate change and ocean acidification are having on coral reefs.
- A new study found that eating less protein may improve the bacterial population of your gut, although the researchers caution that it’s just a single study and needs further confirmation. That said, most of us consume more protein than our body needs, and growing enough animal protein to feed the U.S. has deleterious effects on the environment.
- The EPA refuses to enact a proposed ban on a dangerous paint remover that has killed more than 50 people over the last 40 years, but retailers are voluntarily choosing not to carry these products.
- The BBC podcast The Inquiry asked how we messed up antibiotics as we head into a post-antibiotic future.
- The Polish legislature rejected a “citizens’ bill” that would have abolished rules requiring schoolchildren to be vaccinated against infectious diseases, a bill that would have led to the deaths of hundreds of Polish kids had it passed. Warsaw is suffering from a measles outbreak due to foolish parents who skipped the MMR vaccine. Of course, major autism sites hailed the bill when it was introduced, despite mountains of studies showing no link between vaccines and autism.
- Peter Hotez, author of the new book Vaccines Did Not Cause Rachel’s Autism, looks at the map of U.S. counties with the most kindergarteners who skipped vaccinations. The maps of states and counties he shows are interesting, but the county map tracks population a little too well – highlighted counties include the third, fourth, thirteenth, and fifteenth-most populous in the U.S.
- Vice-President Mike Pence stood up for Burma’s Rohingya minority, condemning State Counsellor and Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi for failing to stop or oppose ethnic cleansing efforts by the military government against the Muslim minority.
- MLB is butting heads with regional sports networks over the rights and payments around in-market streaming of live games, potentially bad news for baseball fans who just want to watch their home teams’ games and are willing to pay for that right.
- Andrew Zimmern of Bizarre Foods spoke to a Taiwan blog about the Taipei food scene.
- Someone used fake social media accounts to give the impression of fan support for the Ottawa Senators in the wake of a controversy around players who were filmed mocking the team and its coach.
- Tasty Minstrel games has a Kickstarter up for a reissue of Luna, a Stefan Feld game from 2010, in a new “deluxified” edition.
- There’s also a Kickstarter for a new game based on the animated series Oddbods, aimed at kids 7 and up.
- Finally, the tweet of the week is probably not a true story, but I want it to be:
OH MY GOD ?? pic.twitter.com/CHh24Xy13A
— Daniel Pryor ? (@DanielPryorr) November 16, 2018
That “best of” piece by Kevin Alexander has been stuck in my head since I read. It’s very good and just so heartbreaking, but I struggled with how the author seemed to veer wildly from his subject matter to making himself the subject/victim. I dunno…it was deeply written, but with odd lack of…self-awareness?
I agree. He’s not the interesting part of the story, and I don’t really feel any sympathy for him at all. He did something that had unintended consequences and now he can learn from it.
Hi Keith – just a note on the Ottawa Senators players, they were filmed without their knowledge by their Uber driver, not themselves. Thanks
https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-news/embarrassing-ottawa-senators-video-likely-legally-recorded
Fixed, thank you.
I’m not sure I’m buying the whole “lists/rankings/praise are the problem” argument. While there are undoubtedly consequences good, bad, and otherwise to newfound and perhaps unexpected fame, the particulars that befell this hamburger joint seemed really specific to that environment.
There is definitely something interesting in our broader push for “only the best!” Master of None demonstrated this in the scene where the characters couldn’t just go get tacos, they had to research and get THE BEST tacos. But that is a broader societal thing and I don’t really think the fault of the people making lists. It is a bit of a chicken-and-egg thing but ultimately we are all responsible for our own choices. If we overwhelm certain places while ignoring others, that is on us. And if certain staffs can’t handle a shifting clientele market — as the owner says — successful people don’t blame others.
Lastly, there seemed to be quite a bit of privilege poking through. This phenomenon isn’t really universal. The number of folks who’ll travel to a new city and spends hours in line for a (possibly overpriced) meal are not everyone, as most people don’t have the time, money, energy, or disposition to handle themselves in that way. Such people DO exist, but the idea that “THIS IS THE NEW NORMAL FOR EVERYONE” seems a little lacking in perspective.
As someone up above said, that article seems to exist first and foremost for the author himself with this “phenomenon” really just being an avenue to self-indulge a bit.
Agreed on all points. While I understand the plight of those involved, it sure seemed like it was written to make the author get sympathy, as much as the author giving any deep insight into what occurred & why & how he would do things differently if he could do them all over again.
The other thing I’ll mention is that thing bounced all over the place narratively. Seemed like it was very tough to follow the article at times & had a lot of extraneous parts to it.