Entries from September 1, 2002 - September 30, 2002

Monday
Sep302002

Party In Bounds

Memorable moments from the B-52's concert at the Coto De Caza Golf And Racquet Club, Saturday, September 28, 2002:

"Is that pot? No, it's a Cohiba."

Median age: 51.5.

Typical female attire.

Typical male attire.

Wicked Rock Lobster lyric morph:

We were at the beach
Everybody had matching towels
Somebody went under a dock
And there they saw a Zinger
It wasn't a Zinger
It was a Right Winger!

Monday
Sep302002

You're Only Five Once

I would suggest saving the SpongeBob 4-Pack for Fishrush, but otherwise, have at it!!

Happy Birthday, Jenna, the BabyBlogger! (Not to be confused with Babe-Blogger: "RageBoy has been very good to my family, especially our young daughter...")

Friday
Sep272002

A Fall Cornucopia Of Blawg Articles

Rick Klau has a fun and informative article -- and I'm not just saying that because he plugs yours truly and some of her faves ;-) -- in the October edition of Law Technology News (registration required to access all the following links), entitled How I Learned to Love the Blog, in which he continues to explore the importance of weblogs for law firms. Rick also provides a handy Blogs Sidebar. In fact, the issue is a big legal weblogging fest, with Guy Alvarez offering To Blog or Not..., and -- hi there! -- something I originally posted to The Technolawyer Community, called What You Need to Know about Blogs.

Friday
Sep272002

Roundly Entertaining

Matt Round, author/designer of the wonderful Malevole blog (shortlisted in yesterday's Guardian roundup of best British weblogs, which I link to with trepidation in light of a glaring omission; via Dave Winer) has a Tribute To Ray Harryhausen that is a scream (pun intended). Well worth your time and bandwidth!

Thursday
Sep262002

Can I Have An ASCII Of That?

The more I see this kind of Herculean effort [JD Lasica, When Bloggers Commit Journalism; yes, I know this is a column, not a blog entry] -- and those of, e.g., Doc, Donna and Dan, as well as my own carpally minacious outings -- the more I think we're in for an intersection between the world of weblogging and the world of court reporting. Which is not to say good blogging consists of regurgitating who said what at an event. But the significance of the fact these tools let anyone "report" firsthand on limited or closed proceedings that may be of interest to whole swaths of people who cannot attend should not be ignored.