Even France Succumbs To Our Ways

The International Herald Tribune reports that Parisian doctors are perplexed by the runaway success in the United States of the best-selling advice book “French Women Don’t Get Fat.”

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“Oh, but they do!” said Dr. France Bellisle, a prominent obesity researcher here. “I work in a nutrition department where we see lots of people who are overweight. And I can tell you that French women are getting obese – and some massively obese – these days.”

In France, as in much of the world, the culprit is changing eating habits, experts said, as France’s powerful culture of traditional meals has given way to the pressures of modern life. The French now eat fewer formal meals than they did just a decade ago and they snack more.

The average Frech meal has decreased in length from an hour and 22 mintes in 1978 to just 38 minutes today.

Not surprisingly, food companies say that France is one of the most promising international markets for prepared items like frozen pizza, as well as for outlets like McDonald’s and Kentucky Fried Chicken, both of which are planning to open dozens of new stores in the country this year.

Smokeless Crack

Michelle at Meme First is brave enough to speak openly about her addiction.

Is it just me or is there anyone else out there addicted to iTunes Music Store? It’s like being at a dollar store and you keep buying all these things you don’t need but kind of like because they’re so darn cheap. You keep seeing these signs everywhere – buy me for only $0.99! I now see them in my sleep. I need help.

You can’t stop. Just $0.99 more. That’s less than a dollar, you know. No one will miss a dollar. Or another. Or one more. Or perhaps 30 more? On a good day. Please, I need help. Someone help me. I’m not sure I can live this like any longer.

You have to give it to Apple. Its site is easy to use, so spending good hard increments of $0.99 is really, really easy. Scary easy. In fact, it’s only one click away. I unchecked the verification of purchase box so now when I click, it doesn’t bother to ask me if I’m sure, if I can really afford it, if I’m all right with eating PB&J’s or Mac & Cheese for the rest of the month because before I know it, the song is downloaded and my VISA is charged. The man (only a man could be this evil) who developed this system is a genius or a drug pusher or both. I bet he owns a big house, several really nice cars and now my soul.

I feel her pain/pleasure. I just started buying up songs about a month ago and I can’t seem to stop. It’s that instant gratification thing. Plus, MP4s are awesome. No one seems to be talking about MP4, but it’s a CD-quality file at MP3 size, and a marked technological advance.

Plus, you can share your purchased playlist with the world at the iTunes store. Pretty damn nifty.

Prefab Can Be Pretty Fab

Cory Doctorow at Boing Boing points to this article on German resistance to prefabricated construction, despite the obvious benefits.

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A prefabricated house can be compared to buying clothes off the rack instead of having them made to order. The various elements of a house — nearly always made of wood — are cut to specifications in factories. These are then assembled, sometimes within days, at a building site.

But the notion that “prefab homes” are cheaply made and are cookie-cutter solutions for low-end buyers is changing. In the past decade, prefab houses have become more diverse and individualized. They lead the industry in terms of energy efficiency, ecologically sound building techniques, and technical advances.

And now, thanks in part to some star architects, they are improving their image in terms of design as well. In the past few years, architects such as Gustav Peichl, Matteo Thun and Frank Gehry have turned their hand to designing “off the rack” houses, with surprising results.

Still, only 13 percent of homes in Germany are prefab, while 70 to 90 percent of newly constructed homes in design-sensitive Scandanavia are prefab.

Bluffton Enters The Participation Age

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A few weeks ago, a new newspaper started arriving at the house every morning. At first, I didn’t take much notice of it, but I gradually warmed up to it, and as I dug deeper and learned more, my jaw dropped. Why? Because Bluffton Today’s online version is a cutting edge experiment in newspaper publishing, happening right here under my nose in small town South Carolina.

Here’s what CBS Marketwatch has to say about it:

Morris Communications Corp. has begun publishing Bluffton Today, a tabloid newspaper tightly coordinated with a Web site, BlufftonToday.com. The hyperlocal publication will be distributed free in the namesake South Carolina community of about 15,000 people. Every reader will be invited to log onto the Web site and comment about stories, as well as start their own blog, upload pictures and even contribute recipes.

“Newspapers have gone on the Web by putting yesterday’s news online,” said Steve Yelvington, manager, Web site development for Morris. “That’s a one-way street. We are doing the opposite; Participation is right at the center of what we’re doing.”

He added: “BlufftonToday.com is a grand experiment in citizen journalism, a complete inversion of the typical ‘online newspaper’ model.”

Readers’ comments about stories will be edited and printed in the hard copy of the paper.

Success will be easy to judge, according to Yelvington. “People will be participating. The reality is people are doing this already, publishing their own Web sites and Web logs. The choice is not whether it will happen but whether we are going to participate in it.”

Still, I have to ask, “Why Bluffton?”

“Bluffton is one of the fastest-growing communities in the Southeast and is the perfect place to launch this new phase of newspaper and Web publishing,” said Morris Publishing Group President and CEO, William S. Morris IV. “We are proud to add Bluffton Today to the family of Morris newspapers.”

Morris Communication, based in Augusta, GA owns more than 30 daily and nondaily newspapers across the country, with total combined circulation in the range of 700,000. The company has a concentrated presence in the Southeast, with four signature holdings: The Florida Times-Union (Jacksonville), The Augusta Chronicle, the Savannah (Ga.) Morning News and the Athens (Ga.) Banner-Herald.

Bust Out The Hoe

Robert Patterson points to this startling article in Rolling Stone by James Howard Kunstler, author of The Geography of Nowhere, Home From Nowhere and The Long Emergency: Surviving the End of the Oil Age, Climate Change, and Other Converging Catastrophes of the Twenty-first Century, due out next month from Grove/Atlantic (and the book from which the Rolling Stone article is adapted).

This article really needs to be read from top to bottom and then read again, but here are some excerpts to whet your appetite:

Carl Jung, one of the fathers of psychology, famously remarked that “people cannot stand too much reality.” What you’re about to read may challenge your assumptions about the kind of world we live in, and especially the kind of world into which events are propelling us. We are in for a rough ride through uncharted territory.

It has been very hard for Americans — lost in dark raptures of nonstop infotainment, recreational shopping and compulsive motoring — to make sense of the gathering forces that will fundamentally alter the terms of everyday life in our technological society. Even after the terrorist attacks of 9/11, America is still sleepwalking into the future. I call this coming time the Long Emergency.

The few Americans who are even aware that there is a gathering global-energy predicament usually misunderstand the core of the argument. That argument states that we don’t have to run out of oil to start having severe problems with industrial civilization and its dependent systems. We only have to slip over the all-time production peak and begin a slide down the arc of steady depletion.

The United States passed its own oil peak — about 11 million barrels a day — in 1970, and since then production has dropped steadily. In 2004 it ran just above 5 million barrels a day (we get a tad more from natural-gas condensates). Yet we consume roughly 20 million barrels a day now. That means we have to import about two-thirds of our oil, and the ratio will continue to worsen.

Now we are faced with the global oil-production peak. The best estimates of when this will actually happen have been somewhere between now and 2010. In 2004, however, after demand from burgeoning China and India shot up, and revelations that Shell Oil wildly misstated its reserves, and Saudi Arabia proved incapable of goosing up its production despite promises to do so, the most knowledgeable experts revised their predictions and now concur that 2005 is apt to be the year of all-time global peak production.

Kunstler goes on to say we will have to “accommodate ourselves to fundamentally changed conditions.” He argues that alternative energies will not save us and predicts a return to local economies by the mid-21st century.

Food production is going to be an enormous problem in the Long Emergency. As industrial agriculture fails due to a scarcity of oil- and gas-based inputs, we will certainly have to grow more of our food closer to where we live, and do it on a smaller scale. The American economy of the mid-twenty-first century may actually center on agriculture, not information, not high tech, not “services” like real estate sales or hawking cheeseburgers to tourists. Farming. This is no doubt a startling, radical idea, and it raises extremely difficult questions about the reallocation of land and the nature of work.

The successful regions in the twenty-first century will be the ones surrounded by viable farming hinterlands that can reconstitute locally sustainable economies on an armature of civic cohesion. Small towns and smaller cities have better prospects than the big cities, which will probably have to contract substantially. The process will be painful and tumultuous.

Some regions of the country will do better than others in the Long Emergency. The Southwest will suffer in proportion to the degree that it prospered during the cheap-oil blowout of the late twentieth century. I predict that Sunbelt states like Arizona and Nevada will become significantly depopulated, since the region will be short of water as well as gasoline and natural gas. Imagine Phoenix without cheap air conditioning.

I’m not optimistic about the Southeast, either, for different reasons. I think it will be subject to substantial levels of violence as the grievances of the formerly middle class boil over and collide with the delusions of Pentecostal Christian extremism. The latent encoded behavior of Southern culture includes an outsized notion of individualism and the belief that firearms ought to be used in the defense of it. This is a poor recipe for civic cohesion.

The Mountain States and Great Plains will face an array of problems, from poor farming potential to water shortages to population loss. The Pacific Northwest, New England and the Upper Midwest have somewhat better prospects. I regard them as less likely to fall into lawlessness, anarchy or despotism and more likely to salvage the bits and pieces of our best social traditions and keep them in operation at some level.

The Long Emergency is going to be a tremendous trauma for the human race. We will not believe that this is happening to us, that 200 years of modernity can be brought to its knees by a world-wide power shortage. The survivors will have to cultivate a religion of hope — that is, a deep and comprehensive belief that humanity is worth carrying on.

Community Radio Rocks My World

I spend my days in front of a computer screen, which, like all things, has its plusses and minuses. One minus is my degrading posture. Another my repetitive stress injuries. On the brighter side, there is blogging and information sharing from around the world. One medium I particularly love to absorb information from is community radio delivered via streaming media, or in my case, iTunes.

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Art by Robinella

I’ve been listening in on several communities over the past couple of years. KGNU in Boulder, WLUW in Chicago, WMSE in Milwaukee, KAOS in Olympia, KCRW in Santa Monica, and more recently WXYC in Chapel Hill, WFMU in Jersey City and WDVX in Knoxville. All these stations blow commercial radio off the dial, but I’m particularly liking WDVX right now. Mainly, because I’m a relatively new fan of true country music. Not Nashville! True country, or what old timers might call mountain music.

Unchecked Greed Is The Order Of The Day

According to an Associated Press report, lawmakers plowed through an energy bill yesterday that would provide billions of dollars in tax breaks to industry, open an Alaska wildlife refuge to oil drilling and aid farmers by expanding the use of ethanol in gasoline.

Hey, I’m all for ethanol. So there is some good news. But now back to the bad news.

Democrats were expected to try to remove a provision that would, for the first time, allow oil exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska. Republicans said they’re confident the attempt will be rebuffed.

The refuge drilling issue is all but certain to be rejected in the Senate where opponents have vowed to block it by filibuster. Refuge drilling proponents in the Senate, instead, are hoping to get the measure passed as part of the budget process where the filibuster cannot be used.

Democrats complained that the tax package, which advanced out of the Ways and Means Committee, provides little to promote renewable energy sources and reduce energy use while funneling tax benefits to energy companies that already are making huge profits from high energy prices.

“There is no provision … that will lower the price of gasoline, only protect the profits of the oil industry,” said Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) “What do the American people get — nothing but a raw deal.”

Hey Ted, Here’s Another One For You

Medway Plantation, the historic 6,700-acre estate and paradise for sportsmen, has come on the market after more than 300 years in private hands. Medway offers traditional luxury, a sporting life, and access to all the cultural attractions of Charleston. The property encompasses an English country-style main house—the oldest masonry residence in the Carolinas—four guest houses, three staff houses, two swimming pools, a lakefront lodge, a boat landing on the Back River, forests, formal gardens, a stable for 12 horses, and 13 lakes and impoundments. The plantation is ideal for quail, dove, and duck hunting, and the forests are full of deer and wild turkeys. Steeped in the history and traditions of the Lowcountry, it is protected by conservation easements to ensure enjoyment by future generations. This queen of Southern estates is available for sale to the most discerning of buyers.

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The “Ted” I refer to in the title is media maven, Ted Turner—the largest private landowner in the US, second only to the US Bureau of Land Management.

Who Is This Guy, And Why Does He Keep Following Me?

I happen to share a name with pop music icon, David Byrne. Due to this simple twist of fate, I must endure comments like, “I love your band, man” and “Left your big suit at home today, huh?” every time I meet someone new. I usually say something like “This really isn’t my beautiful house” in return.

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Now, the namebrand confusion may worsen, as the RISD grad has launched his own web site and internet radio station–areas I’ve long been active in.

For the record, he spells it “Byrne”. I spell it “Burn”. His spelling is English. Mine is Scotch.

“The Nathanael West of Rock”

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Sam Umland, professor of English at Univ. of Nebraska loves the musical artistry of Stan Ridgway. The so-called “Professor of Ridgwayology” has this to say about Ridgway’s latest effort, Snakebite: Blacktop Ballads & Fugitive Songs:

The critics better heed this record, give it a serious listen, and consider it for a Grammy nomination. That’s right. I said it: it’s worthy of a Grammy nomination, and I’ll stand by my assertion. It is so musically diverse, so masterful in its arrangements, and so fully realized in its farcical despair, one is tempted to call it the definitive Stan Ridgway record.

Umland also has an interetsing interview with Ridgway on his site. Here’s an excerpt:

Umland: Perhaps your eclecticism derives from guitar lessons taken with David Lindley?

Ridgway: I met Lindley in Pasadena in 1966 and took lessons from him for about a year and a half. He taught me how to finger pick the guitar with an alternating bass pattern, a la John Hurt and turned me on to stuff I wouldn’t have found out about otherwise–obscure jazz, lost blues, Indian ragas, ska, and anything weird! He showed me how to get feedback from my amp; showed me bottleneck and barr chords (“Ouch, Dave! These chords hurt”). His band then was Kaleidoscope and they had a couple of records on Epic. Very cool group. They mixed up all kinds of things like blues, country, raga, and Turkish music. If you find anything by them buy it. I’ll always be grateful for what Lindley showed me and not to mention “expanding my mind”. . . it was the 60s, after all.

I just learned of Ridgway today, from a comment on Peter Case’s blog. The commentator said he only listens to three artists from bands he used to listen to in the 1980s—Peter Case (of course!), Paul Westerberg and Stan Ridgway. I was intrigued enough to purchase Snakebite on iTunes. I’m happy with the ten dollar purchase, and will surely be more so after several listens.