im with glenn and paul and rick. anger and resentment are effective. hope is a thin gruel. i hope those swing voters arent very hungry.
i dont know whre to post this. here i guess.
Big Media Matt lives up to his name with an op-ed (rebuttal?) in the WaPo. Perfectly stated I think.

But is it in the print edition or just on line?
walter cant reed.
‘Either Way You Get Your Dog Back.’

rip sheldon keller
october unsurprising?
pink meat issue

via adman
Dirty Ducks

via digbys

popcorn chips
randy dunn "stop the madness!"
"No one would argue that Mad Men’s producers should spend as much time or money on the closing credits as they did on the opening credits. And it’s not like they necessarily had to choose a font that existed by 1962. (The font in the opening credits looks like Trade Gothic Condensed or a similar classic gothic, but it may well be a modern cut.) My point is, it wouldn’t be hard to choose Helvetica or Futura or even EF Windsor Light Condensed from the drop-down font list in whatever program is used to create the closing credits."
dahl ink
(alice) feiring and (parker) loathing
new coke.....machine
my first us open tennis alert. roger federer is being challenged in the fourth set, down a break, but hes up 2-1 in sets. on usa network. williams sisters meet up in the quarters tomorrow night.
ring king
alecazam
top gear till 10 pm on bbc
Shit. Here we go again. Fingers crossed.
Time to leave New Orleans
I've been criticized by some for recommending people evacuate New Orleans, since that's not my job, and for saying "it's not natural" to live in a city that lies partially below sea level. I apologize for my remarks, they could have been phrased better. We had to build New Orleans where it is, and it is a great city that needs to be protected. The fact remains that New Orleans is highly vulnerable to storms like Gustav. Gustav is capable of bringing a storm surge to the city that will overwhelm the levees. Pre-Katrina wisdom suggested that the city needed 72 hours to evacuate. With the population about half of the pre-Katrina population, that lead time is about 60 hours. With Gustav likely to bring tropical storm force winds to the city by Monday afternoon, that means it's time to leave. I'm not an emergency manager, but I am a hurricane scientist. I understand the danger this storm poses better than most. The risk of staying in New Orleans is unacceptable. This is a huge and dangerous storm that has already killed a lot of people. The projected track and strength of Gustav is very close to that of Hurricane Betsy of 1965, the Category 3 hurricane that overwhelmed New Orleans' levees, and killed 76 people. It's time to get out of New Orleans.
The re-incarnation of The WB as a network on the interwebular tubes.
meat you halfway.
hey, jerky!
Since passage of the Patriot Act, many companies based outside of the United States have been reluctant to store client information in the U.S.,” said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington. “There is an ongoing concern that U.S. intelligence agencies will gather this information without legal process. There is particular sensitivity about access to financial information as well as communications and Internet traffic that goes through U.S. switches.”
Comcast Corp., the nation's second-largest Internet service provider, Thursday said it would set an official limit on the amount of data subscribers can download and upload each month. On Oct. 1, the cable company will update its user agreement to say that users will be allowed 250 gigabytes of traffic per month, the company announced on its Web site.