Yellow Tales 2: Cruise Control
Apparently it's incorrect to write "Yellow Tail". The correct written form is "[yellow tail]".

Apparently it's incorrect to write "Yellow Tail". The correct written form is "[yellow tail]".
G'day mates! Yellow Tail America has a blog! It's a little disappointing, however, as the blog hasn't been updated since October. What's even more disappointing is that the blog was founded in October! As many of you may or may not know, I'm a big fan of Yellow Tail wine. It's a good Australian wine at a great price! I can usually pick up a bottle for about six bucks, or five if I'm lucky. While I think a blog devoted to Yellow Tail wine is a wonderful idea (Why not use the title "Yellow Tale"?) it seems to have been poorly executed. Maybe the webmaster discovered he liked Yellow Tail a little too much, only to check into rehab... Or maybe it's just sloppy.
Newsflash: Instapundit just discovered Jeff Buckley! GEEKPUNDIT EXCLUSIVE! MUST CREDIT GEEKPUNDIT! Well, maybe not an exclusive, since Glenn just posted it over at his own, infinitely more trafficed site. Maybe I'm too much of a music snob for my own good, but it seems like an obvious oversight to me. Afterall, Reynolds is often listing musicians I've never even heard of, and Jeff Buckley just got his own Legacy Edition Reissue. The legecy edition isn't exactly reserved for obscure artists, covering albums from the Clash's "London Calling" to Carlos Santana's "Santana". Welcome, Glenn. You'll have fun.
I've got to be honest. I've never read Frank Miller's "Sin City". Nonetheless, I'm pumped about the upcoming movie. Maybe it'll be utter shit. But for now I can dream. Just click on the poster for a look-see.
Scott Bakula is earily reminding me of myself. Maybe I, too can helm two science fiction series... Here's the quote, courtesy of Trekweb:
Looking for the perfect gift for the dork in your life? Why don't you try this on for size.
Is there just one "Geek Subculture"? Phoebe Maltz seems to think so. But is that true? I, for instance, never had anything to do with Dungeons and Dragons. I never even played Warcraft. I did, however, buy Magic cards, if only for a while. I was more of a comic book/science fiction guy. I'd like to think these two go together, but in my experience, people think that whatever they do must go together. That brings us back to Ms. Maltz. Even without much of the official trappings of "Geek Subculture," your membership in the club has been secured. The facination with different varieties of cheeses would probably be enough. The blogging puts you over the top. WAY over the top. Keep in mind, I respect both of those things quite a bit. Each is more useful than a facination with Babylon 5 or the fantasy worlds of Jim Henson, but I'm afraid to say they still qualify you for membership in the International Brotherhood (Sisterhood?) of the Dork. Congratulations.
Apple handed me a brand-spankin' new iPod yesterday to make up for the battery problems with my old one, at no charge. The only set back was that I had to sit and watch the guy fill out forms for, like, ten whole minutes. Oh well. I'd say it's time well spent.
I was recently given the task of finding some old dissertations in the U of C's various libraries. Just on the face of it, it seems as though scholarship has changed quite a bit in the last hundred years. Yes, these dissertations were still written about a wide range of obscure topics that some grad student thinks is worth a 200+ page manuscript, but the choice of subject seems to have changed quite a bit. I suppose it's not entirely out of the question, but this dissertation "The Expressions of Emotion in the Pidgeons" struck me as especially bizarre.
Rhino is reissuing the Cure's LPs, starting with what was apparently their first album, "Three Imaginary Boys". I've never really listened to the Cure, but I'm starting to feel as though I should. Pitchfork has a glowing review of the rhino-reissue. Rhino did something very similar to this to the early Elvis Costello albums, and the one I got my hands on, "My Aim is True", is just fantastic. Frankly, Rhino's endorsement through reissue means about as much to me as Pitchfork's review. Maybe I'll take it for a spin.
Maybe I'm a bit behind the curve in saying this, but I'd like to send my friend Molly a warm congratulations on graduating from the U of C. I'll be joining you shortly. Phoebe has more on the subject, but not much more.
Glenn Reynolds inadvertantly openned the floodgates. The most read blogger on the web asks his readers for advice on the iPod and then he's surprised when he gets a gajillion emails on the subject. I'm a devoted instapundit reader, so it surprises me that a gadget lover like Reynolds would miss the likelihood that his blog post would doubtless be read by lots of huge nerds (I mean, we're talking about blogs. It's a fairly self-selecting sample. Fortunately, the internet magnifies our numbers and our influence! Mwa ha ha!)
It's an honor to start the new blog with the delightful task of posting about the (apparently) upcoming Babylon 5 motion picture. Am I a huge geek? Well, the name says it all, doesn't it? Now, J. Michael Straczynski (creator and almost exclusively the writer of Babylon 5) is famously connected to his fans over the web, and there's yet to be any official word from him. However, the balloon's gone up all over the movie gossip sites. While nobody has anything appreciably different from the other sites, it's worth keeping an eye on each of them.
It's the end of Fall Quarter here at the University of Chicago. That means it's time for a new blog. These things have an interesting life-cycle. I feel as though it makes more sense to start a new blog from scratch, rather than resurrect a now-defunct blog, whose readership and interest level collapsed long ago, due to lack of interest. As always, I'll make a promise to do better next time. Just for now, though, here's a list of the blogs I started that are now dead.