Battlestar Galactica Returns

Battlestar Galactica seal

I was late to join the party but now am here for the duration. Battlestar Galactica, the fourth and final season 4, starts Friday. If you’re also late to the party, the SciFi channel has a wry 8-minute video summary of the first three seasons, Salon has a great primer on the plot and characters to date and Adam Nash has a ton of great content on spoilers and theories on his blog.

Season 4 season premier: 9:00 p.m. PT 4 April 2008, SciFi channel.

Living the Dream

Temp Hides Fun, Fulfilling Life From Rest Of Office

The Onion

Temp Hides Fun, Fulfilling Life From Rest Of Office

I read this article eons ago when I was a lawyer and couldn’t stop laughing. As a lawyer, it resonated with me. Now, a decade later, it’s a humorous reminder to work to live and not the other way around. :)

My two favorite quotes:

  • “I don’t want to rub in how much I get to do the things I want to do,” Braxton said. “I feel sorry for them. They go home after a hard day, and they’re so fried they just spend the night sitting in front of the TV. You know how these people spend their weekends? Resting. They rest.”

  • “They wanted to go for the brass ring and really live the good life,” Braxton said. “What they don’t seem to get is that the key to living the good life is to avoid that brass ring like the fucking plague.”

The Big 4-0: Thank You!

It’s been almost two weeks now as I write, but I want to thank Carol D. and the Wednesday Night Dinner Club for throwing me a great 40th birthday party! Thank you to everyone who celebrated with me! I had a great time — at least so far as I can remember. :) Thank you!

Check out my SmugMug site for photos of the event.

Back to Blogging

I’ve now taken a two month complete break from blogging precipitated by an extraordinarily busy summer at work that broke my habit.

Here’s a sampling of what you may have missed:

  • I started a new job in mid-June — my 8th in 3+ years at eBay! — and had a great albeit unprecedented busy summer because of it.
  • I concluded the World Series of Poker with no cashes but was happy with my play.
  • My Dad visited in July and met his granddaughter Alex for the first time!
  • I read the final Harry Potter, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. It was awesome and neatly tied up loose ends.
  • I finally started tinkering with Facebook and now am bored with it already.
  • Somehow, I went to three country music concerts over the summer. The CMAs are tonight, and I’m rooting for Taylor Swift.
  • The one year anniversary of my maternal grandmother’s passing was August 10. We all miss her.
  • Nathaniel & Joshua entered the world on September 10. Congratulations, Emily & Scott!
  • I was in Dreilinden, Germany for the third time for eBay.
  • My cousin Heejae married Eugene. Congratulations!
  • My beautiful niece Alexandra had her first birthday and we had a lovely feast in L.A.
  • I developed a mild addiction to/obsession with the novels of Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child and read seven of their books in three weeks.
  • I’ve started to work out with a trainer. If you see me eating crap, please give me crap about it. :)
  • My big 4-0 is looming just around the corner!

That’s most of the important or interesting stuff. I’ll try to resume that blogging habit! :)

Movie Review: Michael Clayton

I saw Michael Clayton Saturday and highly recommend it. Akin to the role of Victor the Cleaner in Le Femme Nikita, George Clooney plays Michael Clayton, his law firm’s “fixer” — deftly applying his law enforcement background, legal experience and people skills towards solving the most difficult and delicate of problems for the elite clients of his New York law firm. Had I known such a job existed, I might have stuck with my own legal career and aspired towards it.

Over the course of a few days in which his personal family and financial problems converge with a crisis for his firm, Clayton gets to the bottom of an enigma while wrestling with his conscience over moral dilemmas.

I had no knowledge of the movie nor expectations going into it and was captivated from the outset. It gets 90% fresh tomatoes on Rotten Tomatoes. Go see it!

Happy Birthday P Junior!!!

P Junior on Her Birthday!

I have been insanely busy at work and without time to write for over a month now, but this is big: P Junior entered the world today!!! 7 pounds, 4 ounces. Congratulations, P and Yi-F!!! The leading candidate name is Camilla. As in Camilla Yen. As in Chameleon. :)

Speed Movie Reviews

Mid-June, I had occasion to see an excessive number of movies — 8! — over just a few days. In alphabetical order, here are my very quick recommendations on each:

  • 300: I’d seen this Gerard Butler film and saw it again. What guy doesn’t like epic battle stories with a hint of sex?
  • Blades of Glory: Not my favorite Will Ferrell movie but an amusing diversion nonetheless. One of the funnier comedies I’ve seen this year. C’mon, two guys pairs figure-skating? That funny sh*t sells itself.
  • Breach: The critics seemed to like this based-on-reality cold-war flick about a spy for the Soviet Union in the FBI, and I thought it was engaging but not memorable.
  • Bridge to Terabithia: The previews of this movie were misleading. I expected a Science Fiction or Fantasy tale involving real events. This movie is sweeter and involves imaginary events concocted by the two child protagonists. This felt like two movies, not quite tied together, and I was surprised by the ending. Somehow, the movie didn’t feel cohesive to me. But of all the movies I’m reviewing right now, it was the most memorable due to the dissonance.
  • Eragon: This adaptation of precocious Christopher Pioline’s fantasy novel was as bad as critics thought. Derivative, poor special effects, bad pacing, bad acting. I am enjoying the books — I’m a sucker for fantasy tales involving the discovery of latent power — and will read the final installment of the trilogy, but I’d say skip the movies altogether. (I can’t imagine a sequel will be made).
  • Ghost Rider: Wow. Worse than Eragon. Avoid.
  • Shooter: I’ll readily admit I like Marky Mark on the big screen. I enjoyed The Italian Job, among others, and I liked Shooter, in which Marky Mark’s character is framed for an assasination. I’m a sucker for action films in which the hero has unrealistic, nearly super-human powers.
  • Stranger Than Fiction: I just realized I saw two Will Ferrell movies that week. Not as slapstick funny as Blades of Glory but interesting in its own right. I recommend seeing this at home.

Getting To Know Your Friends

My friend S.K. just sent me the email below. I love this kind of stuff. I’ve pasted the complete email below, reflecting my answers to the questions:

Welcome to the 2007 edition of getting to know your Friends. What you are supposed to do is copy (NOT Forward) this entire e-mail and paste it onto a new e-mail that you’ll send. Change all the answers so they apply to you, and then send this to your friends including the person who sent it to you. The theory is that you will learn a lot of little things about your friends that you might not have known.

  1. What time did you get up this morning? 6:20 a.m. (I’m still a bit on Boston time from eBay Live!)
  2. Diamonds or pearls? Alas, diamonds, although pearls are so much cheaper to gift
  3. What two things do you always have with you? My BlackBerry Pearl and my roguish good looks
  4. What is your favorite TV show? These days, I religiously watch “The Office,” “Heroes,” “Lost,” and “24”
  5. What do you usually have for breakfast? Varies . . . most often a power bar, fruit or eggs
  6. What is your favorite book? I seem to talk about Milos Kundera’s The Unbearable Lightness of Being a lot, but I secretly read both David Eddings’ The Queen of Sorcery and Anne McCaffrey’s Dragonsong over and over again
  7. What is your middle name? I don’t have a middle name
  8. What food do you dislike? Beef or chicken liver
  9. What is your favorite CD? For the past month, I’ve been listening to country music phenomenon Taylor Swift’s debut album incessantly
  10. What type of car do you drive? 2000 Honda Accord LX
  11. Favorite sandwich? All-time favorite: Dan’s Subs #8 (hot roast beef & cheese) in Woodland Hills, California
  12. What characteristic do you despise? Arrogance
  13. Favorite item of clothing? My Club Monaco hoodie . . . ultimately comfortable
  14. If you could go anywhere in the world on vacation, where would you go? Anywhere tropical . . . Hawaii, Thailand, etc.
  15. What color is your bathroom? Off-white
  16. Favorite brand of clothing? Armani
  17. Where would you retire to? L.A.
  18. What was your most recent memorable birthday? Can’t remember. Looming 4-0 overshadows all memories of the past and present
  19. Furthest place you are sending this? London
  20. Who do you least expect to send this back to you? Heidema
  21. Person you expect to send it back first? Em
  22. Favorite saying? “Right”
  23. When is your birthday? Year of the Goat
  24. Are you a morning person or a night person? Both. Problem is I can’t sleep all afternoon
  25. What is your shoe size? 7.5
  26. What did you want to be when you were little? A lawyer – sad, but true
  27. How are you today? From now on, every day, I am always excellent!!!
  28. What is your favorite candy? All-time favorite: Snickers bar
  29. What is your favorite flower? French tulips
  30. What is a day on the calendar you are looking forward to? 31 July – new Harry Potter book released
  31. What was the last thing you ate? Garlic chicken pizza
  32. Do you wish on stars? Yes, and not infrequently
  33. If you were a crayon, what color would you be? Red
  34. How is the weather right now? Air conditioned
  35. Last person you spoke to on the phone? N.
  36. Do you like the person who sent this to you? Yes
  37. Favorite soft drink? Diet Coke
  38. Favorite restaurant? Sushi Nozawa, Studio City, California
  39. Hair color? Black
  40. Favorite day of the year? The first day of Spring
  41. Summer or winter? Winter
  42. Hugs or kisses? Put those two together!Chocolate or Vanilla? Chocolate
  43. Do you want your friends to email you back? Yes!
  44. When was the last time you cried? Don’t remember or won’t say
  45. What is under your bed? Alpaca slippers, empty luggage, yoga mats
  46. Favorite smell? Fresh baked bread
  47. What are you afraid of? Death
  48. Plain, butter or salted popcorn? Plain (healthier)
  49. How many keys on your key ring? 4
  50. How many years at your current job? Just over 3 years
  51. Favorite day of the week? Saturday
  52. Do you make friends easily? I don’t think so
  53. What are you listening to right now? Amjad Hanif discussing trust and safety on eBay

Copy. Paste. Edit. Email. Enjoy.

The Sad Decline Of Service On Domestic Airline Flights

UAL minimeal

I must be spoiled. Over the past two years, the only airplane flights I’ve taken over 6 hours have been international flights in which the amenities, meals and service have been adequate to great. Moreover, I’ve been fortunate to travel business or first class.

By amenities, I mean the in-flight kits containing socks, toiletries, etc., given to business class and above passengers and little things like even audio headsets. By meals, I mean the quality and variety of the food and drink provided. And by service, I mean the attentiveness, attitude and efficiency of the flight staff.

If you fly internationally on non-U.S.-based airlines, you will realize immediately that the amenities, meals and service on U.S.-based carriers, particularly on U.S. domestic flights, in contrast, are noticeably and unequivocally worse.

Amenities on U.S. carriers are non-existent or minimal at best. I’m writing this post on a United Airlines flight to Boston, and the audio headset for listening to in-flight entertainment was loose, not packaged in plastic, with the cord coiled around it. At least the plastic packaging that used to be used provided the illusion of hygiene. Now, high-maintenance gadget geek that is am, I bring my own Bose noise reduction headset wherever I fly. Today, however, I can’t use it, because the headset jack in my seat is not just broken, it’s literally missing altogether.

But wait, there’s more! Meals . . . . I must have missed this in the news, but somewhere, somehow, sometime, domestic flights on United discontinued hot, included meals. Now, if you want to eat on a 6-hour flight, you can either bring your own food or you must pay $5 for a lousy assortment of cold crackers and snacks. United Airlines lists the “SnackBoxes” available.

Last, service ranges from outright rude to measurably dour. Southwest Airlines is a noticeable exception, but Southwest doesn’t offer long flights. (I haven’t flown Jet Blue yet).

Compare this experience to the experience you might receive on any Asia-based airline, say Cathay Pacific, Singapore Airlines, Asiana, Korean Airlines or Quantas, and you’ll know that American carriers aren’t even trying.

I have neither monitored nor studied the plight of U.S. carriers. I know that United Airlines has been in a world of hurt. Evidently, the failed economics and/or management of these carriers prevents them from providing even the service they provided in the past.

The only thing that keeps me with United is my accumulation of frequent flier miles, but, even were I want to switch, it is but as if American Airlines or any other U.S. carrier offers a superior alternative.

WSOP Report: The Best Has Yet To Come

JSK at WSOP Event 15, 9 June 2007

(Photo courtesy of www.worldseriesofpoker.com, which asks for a whopping $69 for an unadulterated download of it).

So far, not so good!

I played two tournaments this weekend: Event #15 of the WSOP ($1,500 No-limit Hold ‘em) and a nice, ~500-person $1,000 buy-in tournament at the Venetian. Alas, no cashes so far. I think I was overexcited to be at the WSOP for the first time in two years, and I didn’t play great. Combine that with not “running” great (poker players’ term for not catching cards at the right time), and I exited both tournaments within the first three hours.

I played too long, too tired in cash games, too, so took hits there.

Lessons learned! I’m getting right back in the saddle and will be in Vegas again in two weeks — well rested and ready.

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