Tuesday, February 06, 2024

The Month That Was - January 2024

My memory is uncertain but I think I started blogging in 1999, which means I've been at this for a quarter-century this year.  Nobody actually blogs anymore, at least not in the original sense.  Not even me.  I just do monthly postings to keep my writing muscles engaged.  At the start I didn't have my own url.  I just had some space allocated by my internet Provide.Net, so my page was something like www.provide.net/dmazz which was my personal allotted space on their servers.  There were no blogging tools so I coded HTML by hand and made adjustments to pagination manually with every post. I got quite efficient at it.  It was during that pre-Google era that my blog reached the height of its popularity when I managed to get listed in Yahoo's list of blogs.  In alphabetic order A Dam Site was at the top of the page so anyone who searched for blogs saw mine first in the list.  Had I been smarter and more foresightful I would have parlayed that into a tech empire. (Interestingly, provide.net still exists as some sort of specialty internet provider with a very reasonably priced fiber offering.  I'm guessing they are a reseller/installer, but idk.)

In any event, we once again increment the year and I have an opportunity to reconfirm my new year's resolutions, which are really just my life principles.


  1. Enhance the lives of the people I care about.

  2. Fight sloth (the Deadly Sin, not the adorable forest creature).


I see no reason to change those.


[TV] Alas, Toob Notes

[Rant] San Francisco State of Mind

[Michigan] Michigan State of Mind


[TV] Alas, Toob Notes

If you've been following my posts for the last few years, nothing in this article in the Guardian about the decline of quality television will be new to you.  It's getting some play because the comments are coming from David Chase, creator of the Sopranos, but really it's been blindingly obvious for many, many years.  (BTW, Chase's follow up to the Sopranos, Many Saints of Newark, was an epic disaster so…)

I try really hard to avoid falling into the trap of reminiscing about times past and griping about degradation.  It's a hole virtually everyone steps in, and it's usually wrong.  I still believe the world is improving as surely as I still acknowledge that it is a ten-step-forward, nine-step-back , jagged, and uphill path.  Often things are worse before they get better.  Often things aren't really worse, just different. Often things that you think are worse are actually better. As Tyler Cowen noted, these are times of change and you will hate living through times of change.


But with respect to television, I think I can safely say that things are objectively worse.  Everything (well not everything, but almost everything) being produced now seems to come from a bottle, a formula.  One show gets some eyeballs and everyone rushes to do some variation.  Modern writers can't seem to generate consistent quality.  It's like anything they do that works must be because they lucked into it.  Cases in point:

  • True Detective:  The first season was groundbreaking, with Matthew McConaughey spouting existential pessimism while riding around with a pissed off Woody Harrelson trying to solve the case of a serial killer.  Remember the Yellow King?  Season two floundered but at least it was original.  Season three succeeded by essentially remaking the first season with enough variation that it seemed fresh.  Season four we are now in the middle of and while they've ramped up the spookiness, I haven't seen a return to quality.  It attempts to remake the season one formula yet again, with mismatched cops who hate each other and spooky quasi-mystical imagery, but it is weak on character and long on cop show banality and cultural stereotypes. I should withhold final judgment until it's over but it's looking like a degradation.

  • Fargo:  I think this is the fourth season and it's bad enough that I abandoned it. It's another attempt to leverage the original movie plot of evil cadres on the Northern Plains fighting it out over a macguffin with a cloy and clever innocent stuck in the middle. The first season was sharp but the trajectory has been downhill ever since.  Not only does it break no new ground, the writing has degraded into online political debate level inanity.


Consider:  Both of these shows can't muster a decent fourth season.  The Sopranos, Mad Men, Better Call Saul, et. al. kept quality high and content fresh through five or six seasons.  The general degradation simply cannot be denied.  Allow me to pretentiously quote John Stuart Mill:


In this age, the mere example of nonconformity, the mere refusal to bend the knee to custom, is itself a service. Precisely because the tyranny of opinion is such as to make eccentricity a reproach, it is desirable, in order to break through that tyranny, that people should be eccentric. Eccentricity has always abounded when and where strength of character has abounded; and the amount of eccentricity in a society has generally been proportional to the amount of genius, mental vigour, and moral courage which it contained. That so few now dare to be eccentric, marks the chief danger of the time.


There is one active show that I would classify as eccentric: The Bear.  Prior to that the last show I can remember that I would classify that way was Lodge 49.  Nobody watched it and it only lasted two seasons. I miss it. You might suggest Ted Lasso, but despite its delightful first season, it descended into banal sweetness and woke tropery after that. I'd be more open to Barry as an example, but as clever as it was, anything about crime or crime adjacent can't really be eccentric.  Here's a question: What shows today don't feature character journeys that have them learn societally approved lessons? What shows are about individuals confronting personal conflicts that may or may not resolve in the way the zeitgeist would guide them, or even resolve at all?  


All of this ranting has all been prompted by the fact that, for the first time ever, Northern Exposure has started streaming in its entirety.  I have fallen for this show even harder than I did in its first run.


You see, my friends, quality TV such as The Sopranos didn't emerge from nothing.  There were hints and indications that things were improving through the decade of the 90's prior to its inaugural season in 1999.  Twin Peaks was truly out of this world and remains a cult favorite to this day.  I have written before about the X-files, specifically episodes written by Darin Morgan.  Buffy the Vampire Slayer foreshadowed all the hyper-irony that has since worn thin, but it was fresh and clever at the time and, like, the X-files, the best episodes were magnificent works of drama.  But the one that stands above them all is Northern Exposure.


As I rewatch it I am reminded of the quality of the writing which reached almost poetic heights. Characters are, on occasion, given outright soliloquies. The town DJ -- Chris in the Morning -- acted as a combination spiritual guide and Greek chorus.  There are constant references to great literature and the vocabulary alone would get the show shot down in our world of sixth-grade reading level normalization.


A second viewing of Rob Morrow's performance in the lead role makes me think it's an all time great. It's no wonder the show promptly died when he left.  But the whole ensemble is tight and well cast.


The thing that stands out most to me is the humanity of it.  Look, there is no doubt where the writers stood on social issues, but rarely was anything purely motivated by social issues, and when it was, it was usually a smoke screen for something personal. Let's take the treatment of race.  There is one character who is portrayed as an outright, unrepentant racist and homophobe.  But he is never treated as a person with anything less than sympathy and understanding.  He is treated both by the other characters and by the writers as a human being.  He is not detested, not portrayed as evil, not given poetic beatdowns;  He is given a character arc that allows him to be human and in fact have aspects to his personality that are quite positive. All the characters are like that.  They all have terrible flaws that, in the current year, would require them to go through symbolic or actual punishment and suffering and either be removed or appropriately re-educated.  The contrast with today is truly stunning.


But in the end, it's the writing that does it.  I have discovered three TV shows in my life that use the written word in something other than an utilitarian manner, for exposition or to move the plot along.  Writing that aspires to artistic merit.  Deadwood, Justified, and now Northern Exposure.  Even though I have seen them all before many years ago, I find myself looking forward to the end of the day when I can sit back and enjoy a couple of episodes.  I doubt this will be the last time I rewatch the series.  It belongs in the Pantheon.


How far we have fallen.


[Rant] San Francisco State of Mind

Triggered by both the Lions playoff game against the 49ers (the chosen team of my SO) and this posting of photos by Scott Alexander, which needs to be looked at, I have been  thinking of San Francisco a bit. Those photos remind me of Ann Arbor in the 70s.  Is that good? In any event, Keep Austin Weird can't hold a candle.

SF is so well documented as a disaster of filth, crime, and chaos, that it almost certainly has to be not as bad as it's portrayed.  Still, the exodus of businesses continues.  The toy store that was the inspiration for Toy Story is closing out of safety concerns.  


Paul Graham (of y-combinator) is of the belief that it's a matter of replacing just a small number of council members and things will turn around right quickly:  "There is hope for San Francisco. Most people don't realize the extent to which the city's problems stem from just a handful of incompetent supervisors." Perhaps, but as someone born in Detroit and having been close to its history my whole life, I can say cities "recovering" or "turning around" is the exception not the rule.  Detroit was the wealthiest metro area in the U.S. 1949, it took about 15-20 years to destroy it and despite all the effort and good faith and noble words, it's still a disaster and that's not going to change.  There are overwhelmingly more examples like that than there are of big cities turning around.  To paraphrase Ernest Hemingway, the end comes very slowly, then all at once.


I was in SF only once, a couple of decades ago when it was still a top tourist destination in the U.S. and I was at an early stage in my traveling phase.  I was thoroughly unimpressed.  It was cold and inconvenient and overpriced.  I saw none of the great beauty that other folks seemed to see. During that time, the big three cities for me were Vegas for the Strip, New York for Manhattan, and New Orleans for the French Quarter.  SF was a nothing-burger by comparison.  I saw no reason to ever go back and haven't.  (The closest I've come since was Carmel-by-the-Sea which is worth a visit.)


And in truth, I think the rest of us will be just fine without a functional SF.  Michigander: "So there is the Golden Gate Bridge, which is 1.7 miles long.  You call that a bridge?  Oh, and there is an island near it?  Alcatraz.  I'm sure that's lovely.  Have fun on your wee little bridge and dire, abandoned prison island."

[Michigan] Michigan State of Mind

Despite living my entire life in Michigan, I hit a deer with my car for the first time. It wasn't a hard hit.  The only thing on my car that was smashed was the grill (made of plastic) and the deer ran off into the woods, with probably little more than a bruise. This has been one of the warmest winters on record (thankfully) and the deer seem particularly active and I find myself driving to work before sunrise, so probability finally caught up with me.  Sixty-three plus years without a deer hit is a pretty good record for anyone in the Great Lakes region. I am blessed.

The other Michigan story is football.  My alma mater, the University of Michigan Wolverines took the National title.  The Wolverines are traditionally in the conversation of the top teams.  Usually what happens is that we beat Ohio State and win the Big Ten, but don't get invited to the championship bracket, instead going to one of the top level bowl games and generally losing. If we lose to Ohio State we don't win the Big Ten and so get invited to a second tier bowl game and generally lose. Not this time, this was a charmed year -- undefeated all the way to the National Championship.  Winning National Championships in college is doubly great because it positions you to get the best recruits in the upcoming years.  Of course, in Michigan's case, as soon as we won the championship, the coach defected to the NFL thereby significantly reducing our recruiting power. Sigh. I hate to say it, but my prediction is that Michigan drifts back into the position it was before, rather than kicking off a dynasty.  I hope I'm wrong.


Perhaps even more surprisingly, the Detroit Lions hosted a home playoff game for the first time in 30 years, won a playoff game for the first time in 32 years, and made it to the Conference Championship for the first time. It was a great run for the Lions who were a perpetual punching bag and optimism reigns because the team is young and their very popular coach is coming back.


So yes, it's been a memorable fall and winter in The Glove, but spring can't come soon enough for me.