Saturday Snap – I Hope Overdrive Isn’t Recommending E-books Based on My Personal Reading History…

…otherwise the following could be quite embarrASSing! 😉

20130112-221859.jpg

Friday Fun Link – Sea Turtles at Anini Beach, Hawaii

Since I chose swimming with turtles on Anini Beach on the north shore of Kauai as the highlight of 2012 for me (see question #40), I thought I’d mark the one year anniversary of our departure on that trip with a video of that memorable moment…

Auto-Antonym…

…is a word with a homograph (a word of the same spelling) that is also an antonym (a word with the opposite meaning).

The more you know!

The Day Obama Won The Internet: The Inside Story of His Reddit AMA

Very interesting behind-the-scenes look at how Obama’s Reddit AMA was proposed, how it happened and how it impacted his campaign.

This was a day of political-campaign and Internet firsts, the sitting president subjecting himself to a free- for-all question-and-answer session with a hardcore community of pot-smoking freedom junkies who hated drones and loved porn and had a keen interest in politics and the future. It was chaotically democratic, and something of a gamble. Reddit had its baggage, issues, controversies, etc.; it wouldn’t generally pass a campaign or White House vetting. There’s some fucked up shit there, creep shots, racist rants, borderline teen porn, for example—and other good shit, too, for the most part, but the kind of material that could become fodder for critics looking to attack Obama.

Study Shows Lower Mortality Rate for Overweight People

I honestly thought this was a fake news headline from The Onion when I saw it in my Twitter feed.  Turns out it’s a story from the New York Times!

(Now where’d I leave that bag of Doritos?)

@ryanMeili Monday – The Most Important Endorsement? #skndpldr

Trent Wotherspoon got the endorsement of a trio Manitoba MLA’s today, Cam Broten posted one from a retired Director of Education and Ryan Meili got what could be described as quasi-endorsements from high-profile NDP MP’s Libby Davies (Deputy Leader of the Opposition, Health Critic) and Niki Ashton (Critic for Women’s Issues) in an e-mail blast to his supporters.(“Quasi”-endorsements in that Davies and Ashton don’t come right out and say they’re endorsing Ryan.  But if they’re telling people how much they believe in Ryan’s vision and asking the people receiving the e-mail to donate to Ryan and help him out, isn’t that pretty much the same thing?)

Anyhow, this has encouraged me to share some of my thoughts on endorsements.

I think I’m with The Accidental Jurist in that I don’t know much weight endorsements carry.  Once a candidate has enough endorsements to demonstrate their viability as a leader who can get others to follow them, endorsements seem to have diminishing returns.

The only exception is when the endorsement(s) significantly play against expectations (for example, Erin Weir is likely to see endorsements from economists – and he has.  Trent and Cam are likely to see endorsements from their MLA colleagues – and they have.  Ryan Meili is likely to receive endorsements from the social justice movement – and he has.  None vary much against what you’d expect and are therefore unlikely to change your mind.)

In terms of those endorsements that *do* significantly play against expectation, I’d cite MLA David Forbes’ incredibly brave decision to break with the majority of his caucus colleagues in 2009 (who had all either endorsed former MLA Dwain Lingenfelter or curent MLA Deb Higgins) to support Ryan as being an endorsement on that level.

(I also have no idea if Forbes intends to endorse Ryan this time around.  But whether or not he does, I can’t help but think he must feel some measure of vindication about his choice to endorse Ryan in 2009 given how Meili’s momentum is building again in so many ways this campaign whereas the Leadership candidate that the majority of his MLA colleagues supported in 2009 has pretty much become “he who shall not be named” in terms of the Sask NDP!)

If Forbes’ endorsement went against expectations in 2009, I’d suggest Ryan’s support from Saskatchewan’s largest private sector union is at the same level in terms of playing against expectations and coming as a shock to many in the current leadership campaign.

So are there any remaining “big” endorsements to come this time around that could have a major impact?

Barring a former Leader breaking with tradition to come out in favour of one of the candidates, who else remains?  Although I don’t think they’re quite as influential as they appear on first glance, any of the remaining MLA’s who haven’t endorsed could be a “big” score, especially if they endorsed Ryan Meili or Erin Weir.

Speaking of, where’s the MLA count at right now?  I think Cam’s been endorsed by Danielle Chartier, Doyle Vermette, and Cathy Sproule while Trent’s been endorsed by Warren McCall (leaving John Nilson – who’s unlikely to endorse, both as acting leader and as someone who didn’t endorse in 2009, David Forbes, and Buckley Belanger as the three two remaining MLA’s who might come out for one of the leadership candidates.)

I think the two former Leadership candidates from 2009 who are still around and active in the party, Deb Higgins and Yens Pedersen, could potentially be big scores.

I can’t remember if big labour names like Larry Hubich or Tom Graham endorsed in 2009 but they (or the unions they represent could be big news if they endorsed someone – especially if they didn’t do so in the 2009 race.)  [Correction: Tom Graham has endorsed Trent Wotherspoon – although this was an an individual rather than on behalf of CUPE Saskatchewan.  This is evidenced as per Trent’s initial launch video.  Apologies for the oversight!]

Endorsements, quasi- or otherwise, from federal MP’s, especially those who ran for the leadership like Niki Ashton, could be big.

I’m probably missing a lot of other names that would still be significant but that’s partly because, ultimately, as I said earlier, I don’t think endorsements carry as much weight as some people think they do.  That’s because we’re a party of intelligent, free-thinking individuals who tend to make up our own minds rather than taking our cues from others – whether they’re a “big” name or a party stalwart or whatever.

The irony is that there’s one endorsement that has been proven to truly carry weight with people – the one you get from a friend!  That’s why Ryan’s grassroots appeal and broad-based coalition approach might just carry the day in the end.

The NHL’s Back But Hockey Never Left

I know it’s a Tim Hortons commercial designed to tug the heart strings but it does a good job of summarizing why hockey is so important in the Canadian psyche…

And just to reinforce the impression that my blog suddenly has Tim Horton’s sponsorship, a Timbits highlights reel…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0ibfGb_VUA

Finally, an old blog post about my own, much less lucrative return to hockey in 2008.

Saturday Snap – New Year’s Day Waterslide Chase

We booked rooms at the local Travelodge for New Year’s Eve intending to do some watersliding with Shea’s parents, her aunt and Pace’s cousin.  That’s what we did although when we went down to the pool and the pool attendant informed us that New Year’s Eve is their busiest day of the year in the pool, we knew we were in for a crazy night.

And he wasn’t lying – the swimming pool had half again the rated capacity of people in it, people were using the waterslide pool as a swimming pool, the hot tub was wall-to-wall bodies.

We were lucky to find chairs for our group – both when we first went down and even luckier, when we went back down after the obligatory New Year’s Eve pizza supper.

It was still fun (but crazy!) but the next day made up for it.  We’d inquired and the hotel said check-out was 11am, courtesy check-out was 12pm and then you could pay $10/hr to stay after that right until 4pm if you wanted.  So we decided to have a late breakfast in the room and go down later in the morning.

We went down around 10:30am and noticed people starting to leave already for the 11am check-out.  By 12pm, pretty much everyone was gone and by 12:30pm, we had the pool to ourselves – a great surprise after the insanity of the night before.  We spent a couple hours in the pool with Pace and his cousin loving that they had the run of  the place (although that somehow led to me doing *way* more laps up the waterslide than I planned to do – as evidenced by the video below.)

(Another highlight – Shea repeated a memorable moment from when she was pregnant with Pace, making her own slow-mo trip down the slide!)

Friday Fun Link – 2012 in Four Minutes

I’m not sure whether to be proud or sad that I caught the vast majority of the references in this video…  (If you prefer text links, this one has many of the same memes in the video.  And here’s a summary of the year from a Canadian perspective.)

A Censored Girl’s Name? How Timely!

Seeing that Iceland has a list of approved names for boys and girls and that they’ve taken away the name of a 15-year old girl that somehow slipped through their bureaucracy after being baptized with an unapproved name initially, makes me want to name our baby Blaer just on principle!

(Except I have an objection to giving names with alternate spellings that sentence a child to a lifetime of spelling out their name for people – “No, not J-A-C-K-S-O-N.  It’s Jaxon, with an ‘x'”.)

Least surprising detail in a story about Icelandic names?  The mom of the girl with no name is named…Bjork! 😉