October 23, 2008

Construction noise on three sides for months. Sirens. Car alarms. Is it true that San Francisco is the third noisiest city in the country? Sure feels like it. But then, I'm not sleeping, so everything is muted and amplified at the same time. Two days away from this overly familiar apartment would be nice. Jump in a pool and float on my back, stare up at the sky, kick up a riot of water, then be still, leaving myriad anxieties in my wake, if briefly. Lucky that I can even contemplate such a reprieve--if not actually make good on it. A walk in the park instead then.

Posted by Melissa Price at 12:01 PM





That would be called a laying on of hands.

Posted by Melissa Price at 10:11 AM



October 21, 2008

Listening to Rachel Maddow I re-realize how grateful I am for people like her--clear-eyed, insightful, fair, truth-telling and humorful.

Posted by Melissa Price at 09:51 AM



October 20, 2008

Everyone's telling me not to write about Sarah Palin, so I guess I will.

Everyone's telling me to go to Mexico in March, so I guess I won't. Guess-I-won't-guess-I-won't-guess-I-won't-y-won't-y-won't.

And in case you can't tell: Everyone is saying different things at me, different things at me.

Posted by Melissa Price at 11:20 AM





So think about it: Some mortgage broker in Los Angeles gives subprime “liar loans” to people who have no credit ratings so they can buy homes in Southern California. Those flimsy mortgages get globalized through the global banking system and, when they go sour, they eventually prompt banks to stop lending, fearful that every other bank’s assets are toxic, too. The credit crunch hits Iceland, which went on its own binge. Meanwhile, the police department of Northumbria, England, had invested some of its extra cash in Iceland, and, now that those accounts are frozen, it may have to reduce street patrols this weekend.

And therein lies the central truth of globalization today: We’re all connected and nobody is in charge.

Globalization giveth — it was this democratization of finance that helped to power the global growth that lifted so many in India, China and Brazil out of poverty in recent decades. Globalization now taketh away — it was this democratization of finance that enabled the U.S. to infect the rest of the world with its toxic mortgages. And now, we have to hope, that globalization will saveth.

The real and sustained bailout from the crisis will happen when the strong companies buy the weak ones — on a global basis. It’s starting. Last week, Credit Suisse declined a Swiss government bailout and instead raised fresh capital from Qatar, the Olayan family of Saudi Arabia and Israel’s Koor Industries. Japan’s Mitsubishi bank bought a stake in Morgan Stanley, possibly rescuing it from bankruptcy and preventing an even steeper decline in the Dow. And Spain’s Banco Santander, which was spared from the worst of this credit crisis by Spain’s conservative banking regulations, is purchasing America’s Sovereign Bankcorp.

I suspect we will soon see the same happening in industry. And, once the smoke clears, I suspect we will find ourselves living in a world of globalization on steroids — a world in which key global economies are more intimately tied together than ever before.

It will be a world in which America will not be able to scratch its ear, let alone roll over in bed, without thinking about the impact on other countries and economies. And it will be a world in which multilateral diplomacy and regulation will no longer be a choice. It will be a reality and a necessity. We are all partners now.

-- Thomas Friedman, NYTimes

Posted by Melissa Price at 11:01 AM



October 19, 2008

Now's your chance. Be an aquanaut! A camel herder! Or a pastry chef erotique!

From Leslie of the marvelous Frankenart Mart:

Schedule your Dream Job Appointment Today
Be a marine biologist, a National Geographic Photographer, a baker, an astronaut, a modern dancer, a lion tamer, a librarian - you name it! You dream it - we do it.

1. Sign up for your dream job appointment during mart hours by emailing frankenart@gmail.com.

2. Bring necessary supplies, props, and dreams to your appointment. Some paper, cardboard, and paint will be on hand for your use as well.

3. We will collaborate to transform part of the mart to meet your Dream Job needs. You will have an artist helper and two cats at your disposal to help you in any way possible.

4. Come to your appointment and enact your dream job at the mart. No dream is too small or too big.

5. Artifacts, products, and/ or documentation from your enactment will be on sale at the mart for the duration of the show. Dreamer/ frankenart cut is 50/50.

--
leslie, caitlin (official franken intern 3 times and running!), reuben, and zeke
frankenart mart
515 balboa street
415.221.2394
www.frankenartmart.com

Posted by Melissa Price at 10:55 AM





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