Wednesday, January 26, 2005

Early Picks

Here are our early #1 and #2 picks for the 2005 MLB division races. Two questions determined rankings: (a) Who do we like the best? and (b) Who do we think will win?

AL East
1. Boston Red Sox - we like Matt Clement and Wade Miller
2. New York Yankees

AL Central
1. Minnesota Twins - Johan Santana
2. Chicago White Sox

AL West
1. Anaheim Angels - Orlando Cabrera and Vladimir Guerrero
2. Seattle Mariners

NL East
1. Florida Marlins - Carlos Delgado
2. Atlanta Braves

NL Central
1. Chicago Cubs - the entire pitching staff
2. St. Louis Cardinals

NL West
1. Los Angeles Dodgers - Eric Gagne
2. San Diego Padres

On a completely different note ... Read on Bookslut.com, Gilead has been nominated for Best Fiction by the National Book Critics Circle Award. Go read it!

Holly Hobbie



Before writing the Toot and Puddle books, Holly Hobbie was known to little girls around the world as creator and namesake of the soft blue bonneted friend with a patchwork dress. I had Holly Hobbie books, sheets, pillows, flatware, and, of course, dolls. I loved the drawings - they looked like Little House on the Prairie with a touch of whimsy. The unruly hair and the crumpled clothing were sometimes more endearing than the shiny perfection of Strawberry Shortcake.

Anyway, I used to have a bunch of rag dolls, including the two pictured above, which were Carrie (in red) and Holly (in blue). I also had Robbie, the requisite boy, and this huge brunette rag doll, who I had thought was an earlier version of Holly Hobbie, in fact is another character named Heather. Her yarn hair would always fall in her face.

These were simpler toys, and very huggable. American Greetings is hoping to restart the doll line and has a preliminary website up.

Monday, January 24, 2005

Nike Pro

I was being a good wife and taping the AFC series between Pittsburgh and New England, when I caught the new ad by Nike for its Nike Pro Line. It's a pretty cool ad - sleek, and not a little bit creepy - featuring Ben Rothlisberger, Albert Pujols, and Mariano Rivera. At first I thought it was an ad for some new Xbox game, with the weird AVP-type Game Face morphing, but it's very effective for showing off those Nike Pro shirts. Maybe I just like the way Mariano tugs at his sleeve - although I remind you I am not a Yankees fan.

Sunday, January 23, 2005

Weather Man

Sunday morning, sunny, but enough snow blowing around that it has deterred me from making my regular weekend jaunt - church, CVS, bookstore - and I am home brunching on french toast and surfing the web.

One of the latest Apple trailers is for Gore Verbinski's The Weather Man. This actually looks pretty good. Hope Davis (yay!), Nicholas Hoult, Michael Caine, and Nicolas Cage. I think Nicolas Cage is back on my "like 'em" list. We'll see.

The Weather Man opens April 1.

Wednesday, January 19, 2005

Winter Beverage Advisory

Never leave an unopened can of soda overnight in your car, especially on the coldest night of the season. If you do, make sure it's of the colorless variety.

When I opened my car door this morning, I noticed big pieces of ice on the back of my seat, all over my rear view mirror, and on the ceiling. I thought, Did I leave the door open or something? Could it have been that cold? Then, as I started scraping off the ice on the inside of my car, I noticed the soda can in the beverage holder between the front seats. It had clearly frozen and then exploded overnight. (Non sequiter: What kind of sound do you think it made?)

I am a neat freak, but I am prone to these lapses in judgement that put me right in the middle of such messes. At least it was a relatively "clean" mess. It was a Diet Sprite - thank goodness it wasn't Fanta or Root Beer - so it's little more than flavored water and, hopefully, won't stain anything. There is a light lemon-lime scent, though, oh well. I just hope it doesn't dry sticky, especially over the gear stick.

Friday, January 14, 2005

Who's Tired?



Here is a picture of little Nathan - our friends Hank and Judy's newborn. He's all tired out from studying Constitution Law with his mommy. He has the best cheeks!

Wednesday, January 12, 2005

Game 6



Game 6 of the 1975 World Series on NESN tonight, starting at 7. Gary Nolan (CIN) vs. Luis Tiant (BOS)

"One of the greatest games ever played."

Side note: In his article on the 1975 World Series, [The New Yorker's] Roger Angell attempted to name some of Tiant's unique pitching motions: the Fall Off The Fence, the Low-Flying Plane, and the Call The Osteopath.

Hey, Roger [Chan], there's a tape by the VHS recorder. You can record it after Game 4 of the 2004 World Series, over Breakfast at Tiffany's.

Laser Beams

Funny comment to a post on Baseball Musings, regarding the report that the Minnesota Twins presented a ridiculously lowball initial offer to pitching star (and imminent free agent) Johan Santana:

"Unfortunately for the Twins and their fans, [owner] Carl Pohlad is standing in the way of the vault and he's put a tank of water in front of it, and stocked the tank with sharks that have laser beams attached to their heads. ..."

The Headless Mac



It is a strange, yet beautiful thing: the new Mac Mini. The newest, smallest, cheapest Mac is geared towards Windows-PC users who fell in love with the iPod.

Monday, January 10, 2005

Golden Globes picks

Granted, I haven't seen "Million Dollar Baby" yet so I'm only going in on an educated guess, but here are my picks for the Golden Globe Awards, which will be broadcast this coming weekend. I thought I'd be more conflicted between the two tragicomedies, "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" and "Sideways," but in the end I thought the former was more ambitious and resonated more emotionally. (Although I thought the cast acting overall for "Sideways" was better.)

Picture - Drama
The Aviator
Closer
Finding Neverland
Hotel Rwanda
Kinsey
Million Dollar Baby


Picture - Musical or Comedy
1 - Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
The Incredibles
The Phantom of the Opera
Ray
2 - Sideways


Actor in a Leading Role - Drama
Javier Bardem in The Sea Inside
Don Cheadle in Hotel Rwanda
Johnny Depp in Finding Neverland
Leonardo DiCaprio in The Aviator
Liam Neeson in Kinsey


Actor in a Leading Role - Musical or Comedy
1 - Jim Carrey in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Jamie Foxx in Ray
2 - Paul Giamatti in Sideways
Kevin Kline in De-Lovely
Kevin Spacey in Beyond the Sea


Actress in a Leading Role - Drama
Scarlett Johansson in A Love Song for Bobby Long
Nicole Kidman in Birth
Imelda Staunton in Vera Drake
Hilary Swank in Million Dollar Baby
Uma Thurman in Kill Bill (Vol. 2)


Actress in a Leading Role - Musical or Comedy
Annette Bening in Being Julia
Ashley Judd in De-Lovely
Emmy Rossum in The Phantom of the Opera
Kate Winslet in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Renée Zellweger in Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason


Actor in A Supporting Role
David Carradine in Kill Bill (Vol. 2)
Thomas Haden Church in Sideways
Jamie Foxx in Collateral
Morgan Freeman in Million Dollar Baby
Clive Owen in Closer


Actress in a Supporting Role
Cate Blanchett in The Aviator
Laura Linney in Kinsey
Virginia Madsen in Sideways
Natalie Portman in Closer
Meryl Streep in The Manchurian Candidate


Director
Clint Eastwood for Million Dollar Baby
Marc Forster for Finding Neverland
Mike Nichols for Closer
Alexander Payne for Sideways
Martin Scorsese for The Aviator


Screenplay
The Aviator, Written by John Logan
Closer, Written by Patrick Marber
1 - Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Written by Charlie Kaufman
Finding Neverland, Written by David Magee
2 - Sideways, Written by Alexander Payne, Jim Taylor

Saturday, January 08, 2005

Bucatini alla carbonara

In our younger days, Italian food novices then, we used to get carbonara and alfredo sauce mixed up. No longer - the former is definitely superior in our minds. No heavy cream and such, just noodles tossed with good garlic and olive oil, eggs and hearty bacon. The credit for our opening our eyes, and noses and mouths, to the dish goes to the Chicago restaurant Avec in the West Loop.

Avec serves their carbonara with bucatini and IT IS TO DIE FOR. Luscious strands of bucatini - thicker and rounder than spaghetti - and fatty cubes of housemade guanciale. Heaven.

Roger and I are trying to perfect our house recipe. Here is what we have so far:

BUCATINI ALLA CARBONARA
4 garlic cloves
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1/4 pound pancetta, 1/4-inch thick slices, small strips (we usually can't find guanciale)
2 large eggs
1 pound dry bucatini
1 cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, plus more for serving
Freshly ground black pepper

Note: Prepare the sauce while the pasta is cooking to ensure that the bucatini will be hot and ready when the sauce is finished; it is very important that the pasta is hot when adding the egg mixture, so that the heat of the pasta cooks the raw eggs in the sauce.

1. Prepare the garlic by removing the skins - easily done by mashing the cloves with a garlic mushroom, the handle of a knife, or the bottom of a glass (Gen's favorite method). Do not chop, must mash sufficiently so you can smell the garlic.

2. Heat the oil in a saucepan over medium-high heat. Saute the garlic cloves until golden. Make sure the cloves do not burn.

3. Remove the garlic cloves and set aside - you can discard these or even eat them, they make a tasty amuse-bouche while you wait.

4. Add the pancetta and cook until slightly crisp along the edges. Lower the heat.

5. Cook the pasta until tender yet firm. Drain the pasta well.

6. Bring up the heat on the pancetta and olive oil to low-medium. Then add the hot, drained spaghetti to the pan and toss for 2 minutes to coat the strands in the bacon fat. Remove the saucepan from the heat.

7. Beat the eggs and parmesan together in a mixing bowl, stirring well to prevent lumps. Pour the egg/cheese mixture into the pasta, folding quickly until the eggs thicken, but do not scramble. (You can thin out the sauce with a bit of reserved pasta water, but we like it thick and sticky. Is that a proper cooking term?)

8. Season the carbonara with freshly ground black pepper and taste for salt. Serve, of course, with more cheese.

Friday, January 07, 2005

Mission Statements ... and Famous Friends

I'm trying to put together a comprehensive, but catchy brochure for the Center for Digital Strategies (long overdue), but am having trouble being concise. Here's what I have so far:

Today’s networked economy requires business leaders to see their businesses as part of an increasingly decentralized, more partnered global environment.

To meet this challenge, executives must capitalize on technological innovation and the Internet to create new management strategies – DIGITAL STRATEGIES.

I thought this was a slight improvement on the dense mission statement: The Center for Digital Strategies' mission is to advance the theory and practice of management in a digital, networked economy and to link practitioners and scholars in ways that build economic value. Or the tagline, the Center for Digital Strategies focuses on enabling business strategy. But maybe not.

Let's free write a bit. Some other verbs to consider as push points: Collaborate, Create, and Connect. Dialogue, Research, and Education? The second series sounds dull - of course, no cute alliteration.

The Center brings together practitioners (CIOs, CxOs, GMs) and scholars to examine the role of digital technology in creating competitive advantage. We do this through roundtables (corporate and academic), panels and one-on-one interviews (Tech@Tuck and Radio Tuck), research and field studies, case studies, and the MBA Fellows program. We also contribute analysis regularly to CIO magazine, Information Week, Forbes, Fortune, and the Financial Times.

I'll give it some more thought.

In the meantime, I thought I'd use the relative anonymity of this site to give a shout-out to two of our friends:
Good Friend 1

Good Friend 2


Thursday, January 06, 2005

Great Opportunity Right Here

The snow kept falling outside, nearing eight inches, and still they came. Today was the first day of the Tuck mini-course "Introduction to Entrepreneurship," headed by Gregg Fairbanks (Executive Director, DEN), Aaron Kaplan (interventional cardiologist, DHMC), and Michael Clarkin (President, Trilogy Consulting).

I'm taking the nine-week course, which is open to all Dartmouth students, faculty, and staff, as part of my research on entrepreneurship at Dartmouth for the engineering school magazine - and also, simply, because I thought it'd be fun. A lot of people had the same idea. The course, which originally was slated for 60 spots, had to be split into two sections because over 150 people signed up.

At first when I showed up in the Shapiro classroom I thought I would be the only woman, but soon the room started to fill up, and there was a great mix of people. There were Tuckies (who carried with them their laptops and personal name signs to display), medical researchers, engineers, and more. The Tuckies being Tuckies were the first to speak up about what they felt entrepreneurship was all about, but soon other people started to chime in. It was kind of cool, like being back at Stanford.

In the first half of this week's class, Gregg Fairbanks gave an overview of the course. He addressed the reading assignments - the main text is Guy Kawasaki's The Art of the Start - and class requirements. Those taking the class for credit are required to form teams and prepare a pitch presentation to visiting "investors" at the end of the course. Students with ideas will give a mini-pitch next week and the rest of the class can volunteer to work on their teams.

In the second half, Aaron Kaplan gave a mock pitch presentation on a medical device. After his pitch, the class acted as partners of an investment group and discussed whether they should accept his proposal. We also picked apart the presentation itself, listing things that were effective or of concern.

I'm kind of psyched and definitely want to try to volunteer for a group next week. What's also neat is that I actually know a couple of people in the class - and they're actually two non-Tuck people. Both women work for the Dartmouth Medical School in their development office. We met at a Christmas party before break and had actually planned to get together for lunch on Friday. We didn't realize that we were all taking this class.

I'll be sure to share my notes on each class right here.

Tuesday, January 04, 2005

The Off-Season

How appropriate a title for baseball's "other" season, according to The Hardball Times contributor and Yankee-fan Larry Mahnken. Here is an excerpt from his latest piece, commenting on the on-again, off-again, on-again Randy Johnson trade and the possibility that the Yanks will pass on Carlos Beltran:

Oh, sure, [the Yankees] had a problem in the rotation; it was old, it was fragile, and Javier Vazquez, Jose Contreras and Esteban Loaiza had regressed severely from the previous season. They'd absolutely have to take care of that, so they traded for 41-year-old Randy Johnson and signed Jaret Wright (who had averaged 39 innings over the previous four seasons and has a career ERA of 5.09) and Carl Pavano (and his 4.21 career ERA). Just for good measure, they let their two most valuable starters from the previous season, Jon Lieber and Orlando Hernandez, walk as free agents. Brilliant! The departing trio would cost $22.5 million in 2005 to the newcomers' $33 million, but hey, nice things cost money.

On the other side of Connecticut, it looks like Derek Lowe may be heading to the Dodgers (or the ill-named Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim) and Byung-Yun Kim may move to Colorado.

Saturday, January 01, 2005

The New Year

They say that how you spend your New Year's Day will dictate how you spend the rest of your year. I would like to spend the year writing more. So here I am, awake in the not-so-early morning, hoping to record some thoughts and to feed this habit until it becomes second nature again.

This year we celebrated the Eve quietly. Roger was on call, though fortunately for most of the evening he was able to take the call from home. He was sweet enough to spend it with me watching the "What Not to Wear" marathon on TLC. I was going to pass the time reading Helen Simpson's Getting a Life (Roger had found it on remainder at the Dartmouth Bookstore), but I got pulled in by the catty talk and enjoyed vicariously the $5000 shopping sprees. Although he had to go to the hospital during the crucial hour, Roger did call at midnight and we wished each other a happy new year.

Outside, the New Year has brought signs of spring. All the snow has melted, leaving the trees dewy and the wood porch thoroughly wet - although I am sure we have not seen the last of our friends wind and frost. I quickly pulled the curtains so that my holiday pointsettias, on their last legs, can drink up some of this elusive sunshine. We hope they will last as long as the tree, which we'll probably take down, as was my family's tradition, around January 6, the Day of Epiphany.

Among the writing projects I'd like to resume: the story about Anemone (sort of a story about the relationship my made-up daughter would have with a grandmother that may be like my mother, and I guess, peripherally, with a mother like I might be, an interesting device that would allow me to retread ground covered in my Cherry stories) and this other idea about neighbors in the northeast (opening with a paranoid wife, new to the neighborhood, getting an unexpected letter from her unseen neighbor about how loud her television set is).

Hopefully more ideas will come as I start this nine-week course on entrepreneurship this Thursday. (I'm also trying to fit in two nights of yoga each week.) I've been reading Guy Kawasaki's The Art of the Start and it's been pretty entertaining. A lot of his motivational points could be applied to writing: think big, stop planning and start doing. I'll have to see after the first class whether I'll just be observing the class for my engineering story, or if I feel compelled enough to actually jump in and participate.

I'll end this post with some thoughts for James Hsu, who has been missing since the tsunami hit Thailand. We grew up with the Hsu family in Merced. James was the youngest child, and he played tennis with my brother Jeremy. All the Hsu children were incredibly smart and talented. Stanley, the eldest, was well-respected around town and set the academic example by becoming valedictorian and going to Stanford (his acceptance influenced a lot of students in following years to apply there). Peggy, who was my year, was not only smart, she was a talented artist and well-liked by everyone. I always admired her poise. Although we were in a lot of the same classes, and even attended Stanford together, I still wish I got to know her better. We were all shocked when Stanley, recently graduated from college, died in a car accident while on a trip through Yosemite in 1995.

James, who was a Stanford Business student on a exploratory trip through Asia, was last seen on the island of Koh Phi Phi. His sister Peggy has flown out to search for him. The family has put up stories and posts on newspaper web sites and various travel sites. We hope that they find him soon and come home safely.