Link roundup

1. Michael Lewis's latest, outstanding article on the financial apocalypse focuses on Germany. It's 17 pages but well worth your time. Here's a sample paragraph:
This preternatural love of rules, almost for their own sake, punctuates German finance as it does German life. As it happens, a story had just broken that a division of a German insurance company called Munich Re, back in June 2007, or just before the crash, had sponsored a party for its best producers that offered not just chicken dinners and nearest-to-the-pin golf competitions but a blowout with prostitutes in a public bath. In finance, high or low, this sort of thing is of course not unusual. What was striking was how organized the German event was. The company tied white and yellow and red armbands to the prostitutes to indicate which ones were available to which men. After each sexual encounter the prostitute received a stamp on her arm, to indicate how often she had been used. The Germans didn’t want just hookers: they wanted hookers with rules.
OK, here's one more:
This is what makes the German case so peculiar. If they had been merely the only big, developed nation with decent financial morals, they would present one sort of picture, of simple rectitude. But they had done something far more peculiar: during the boom German bankers had gone out of their way to get dirty. They lent money to American subprime borrowers, to Irish real-estate barons, to Icelandic banking tycoons to do things that no German would ever do. The German losses are still being toted up, but at last count they stand at $21 billion in the Icelandic banks, $100 billion in Irish banks, $60 billion in various U.S. subprime-backed bonds, and some yet-to-be-determined amount in Greek bonds. The only financial disaster in the last decade German bankers appear to have missed was investing with Bernie Madoff. (Perhaps the only advantage to the German financial system of having no Jews.) In their own country, however, these seemingly crazed bankers behaved with restraint. The German people did not allow them to behave otherwise. It was another case of clean on the outside, dirty on the inside. The German banks that wanted to get a little dirty needed to go abroad to do it.

2. Kristin Tercek's having an art sale.



3. NPR's top 100 science fiction and fantasy novels.



4. Grantland continues to better than I had hoped. Two great articles today: Whether the Blue Jays are cheating; Whether John Cena has it within him to become a WWE villain, and how that change would impact WWE's earnings. (I'd love to see a chart showing how much traffic ESPN has lost to Grantland. I never even visit ESPN.com anymore.)
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Brian Wilson of the Giants, frozen in Carbonite







At the September 4 San Francisco Giants game, you can get a Brian Wilson in Carbonite statue:
The statue is three sided, with one side featuring the iconic Han Solo in carbonite pose featured in "The Empire Strikes Back." A second side features Brian Wilson, in his trademark post-save celebration pose, frozen in carbonite similar to Han. The third side features graphics celebrating the Giants and Star Wars.
There are already several on sale at eBay.
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Link roundup

1. "AOL shares closed down 26 percent today."



2. Adam Dunn continues to have a historically bad MLB season.



3. Apparently at least $31 million has already been spent on the recall elections in Wisconsin.
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Link roundup

1. Sad Etsy Dogs, the blog.

2. Great article at Grantland about the collapse of Barry Zito and how Scott Boras promotes his clients.

3. If enough people like Id's Rage Facebook page, the iOS version will be free for a week.
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Link roundup

1. "There have been whispers at times about possible cheating by the Brewers at home because they have been so much better at Miller Park than on the road. They are 40-14 at home, the best winning percentage in the majors, and only 21-35 on the road."

2. Long hatchet article about Martha Stewart. For example:
At the flagship magazine, Martha Stewart Living, one editor after another would come in and try to Real Simplify it, to make it more about hamburgers and chocolate-chip cookies and less about tassel-strewn, Venetian-themed dinners for twenty. A Thanksgiving story shot at Stewart’s stables in Bedford featured a long table and was so complicated that it became almost a comedy of errors. A child’s hair caught fire. Stewart sliced her thumb and was sent to the hospital. At the table, Stewart was flanked by Brooke Astor’s son, ­Anthony Marshall, and his wife, hardly avatars of the simple life. (By the time the story was published, Marshall was on trial for misappropriating his mother’s fortune, and the pictures had to be blurred out.)
Via.

3. Deeply disturbing cake.
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1. This baseball player is apparently having the worst ever defensive year and already owns the single season strike out record.

2. Piers Morgan's involvement in the voicemail hacking scandal.

3. Analysis of Iran's role in the uprising in Bahrain.
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But where's the Bash Brothers poster?









Classic 80's athlete posters get their due at Salon 94. I'm strongly considering picking up one of the L.A. Law posters at eBay.
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Link roundup

1. List of notable players drafted by MLB including two paralyzed players.

2. Photos of Children of Russian Oligarchs. And weird Russian wedding photos. Via.

3. Giant TARDIS. Via.
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1. If you live in LA, there's going to be a special signing event on Sunday to support the Emerald Knights DVD. Via.

2. If you're looking for a netbook, here's a $250 Lenovo deal for a model that got a decent review.

3. I'd love to know more about what caused "a group of 20 ministers of Baptist and Methodist churches" to write "a letter to baseball Commissioner Bud Selig urging him to give [Dodger owner Frank] McCourt a second chance."
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1. I certainly want to believe this is true:
Baseball was an important part of American life in 1887, though the rules were very different. "Batters" got their names from the wooden sticks they used to fend off rabid dogs while standing in the "batter's box."
2. And this sounds good, too:
One in four U.S. hackers is an FBI informer
3. "Battery made up of 144 potatoes powering 12 LED lights."
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Link roundup

1. $20 sketches and the money goes to charity.

2. The Milwaukee Brewers drafted super agent Scott Boras's son in the 30th round. Why yes, Boras does represent the Brewers' best player.

3. TFAW is having a 60% off select graphic novels sale this week.
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Link roundup

1. Soviet Rocket Giraffe is a blast to play (think snowboarding, not flying).

2. Some fun baseball links: MLB owners ranked from best to worst (go Dodgers); Top 50 prospects of the draft era; "Who is Drew Butera, and is he hitting .122?"

3. i09 raves about The River:
The River is much more exciting, immersive, and cinematic than you'd expect from a "found footage" style show. It has a mythology that feels like it could become something for your coworkers to obsess over around the watercooler, but the mysteries aren't of the "endless hand-waving" variety. The makers of the pilot paid attention to the fundamentals: character development and great storytelling, and it's paid off.
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The worst baseball cap in history



The 1969 Seattle Pilots - - ESPN's pick for the worst baseball cap in history. There's ten more here.
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1. Mets pitcher R.A. Dickey gives his baseball bats geeky names, including Orcrist from The Hobbit and "hrunting" based on Beowulf.

2. I didn't read the article for fear of spoiling the headline:
'Mad hatters' gang of middle-aged women blamed for Detroit crime spree

Police in Detroit are hunting a gang of middle-aged women, nicknamed the "Mad Hatters", who they blame for a string of robberies, purse snatching and fraud.
Via.

3. My local theater doesn't show pre-movie commercials anymore, but the theaters that do are having trouble filling the slots:
Part of the reason for the shortfall, according to the firm's CEO, is lack of advertising from Japanese auto and electronics makers who are suffering following March's earthquake and tsunami, as well as the National Guard, which no longer needs to advertise as much because high unemployment numbers push so many candidates its way.
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Link roundup

1. ESPN's 2011 all-overrated MLB team.

2. William Gibson loves the Dyson air multiplier:
Just saw/experienced the Dyson Air Multiplier. FAR more amazing than the Dyson Air Blade.

With the Air Blade, you can imagine how it works. air Multiplier is Arthur C. Clarke's definition of magic. Seriously. 22nd Century tech.

And they look like very large, utterly minimalist pieces of extremely high-end Scandinavian jewellery. And the breeze feels like one.

Love it when a moment of feeling like an immigrant to a new century is so utterly positive.
$300+ at Amazon. Here's an explanation for how they work - - they use something called "process entrainment."

3. It's fascinating reading Susannah Breslin's blog at Forbes (which is about her struggles moving from one job to another, and how to be a successful blogger in general). I don't think she's been blogging there for more than two months, and already she's written a post that is more or less about how she's making choices that will sabotage her continued employment there.
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1. G4TV: We've been paying someone to post our articles at Reddit for ages and are really sorry we've been exposed.

2. Video shows how to throw a knuckleball.

3. The new Amazon Cloud Drive is incredibly easy to use, but uploads are very slow.
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1. Wild stories about the penny-pinching ways of the original Tamp Bay Devils Rays owner.

2. Bleeding Cool posted some really fascinating excerpts from various depositions related to the Kirby Family Vs Marvel Lawsuit. For example, from Stan Lee's deposition:
With Spider-Man, that was kind of an interesting thing. I thought Spider-Man would be a good strip, so I wanted Jack to do it. And I gave it to him. And I said, Jack, now you always draw these characters so heroically, but I don’t want this guy to be too heroic-looking. He’s kind of a nebbishy guy.

Q. Would we call him a nerd today?

STAN LEE: I would say so. Yeah.
Anyway, Jack, who glamorizes everything, even though he tried to nerd him up, the guy looked still a little bit too heroic for me. So I said: All right, forget it, Jack. I will give it to somebody else.
Jack didn’t care. He had so much to do.

Q. Who did you give it to?

STAN LEE: I gave it to Steve Ditko. His style was really more really what Spider-Man should have been. So Steve did the Spider-Man thing. Although, again, I think I had Jack sketch out a cover for it because I always had a lot of confidence in Jack’s covers.
And from the deposition of Larry Lieber (Stan Lee's brother):
Q: Did you come up with any of the names in Thor?

LARRY LIEBER: Yes.

Q: What did you come up with?

LARRY LIEBER: The civilian name of Don Blake I made up. And I also came up with his hammer. I made that, which people know about. My Uru hammer, I created that.

Q: And where did you get the name Uru hammer?
LARRY LIEBER: I just made it up, as far as I know. I might have read it. I used to — Stan liked the way I made up names, civilian names, and I used to, from my years of doing these, what do you call it, these fantasy books, monster books, and I used to look at the back of dictionary, Miriam Webster had biographical names and geographical, so I would look in towns and if I liked the town, I might put it. And it was kind of fun and he liked what I did.

Now, I don’t know if I found “Uru” someplace or I just made it up or whatever. I know I made it short because I felt that Thor might be around a while and I was always worrying about the letterer or somebody. I was worrying about somebody else’s feeling, and I figured, well, if I make it U-R-U, there’s not that much to letter. And since nobody knows the name of it, I’ll make it a short name. So that’s why I did that.

And Don Blake I just thought sounded like a doctor and, you know, to fit the personality. I tried to get names that fit the — the person.

Q: Who came up with the name Thor, the hero name?

LARRY LIEBER: Not me. I don’t know. Stan, I guess. But I don’t — yeah, yeah, Stan.

Q: And just to follow up on something you said, you mentioned a letterer, what was the job of the letterer?

LARRY LIEBER: Well, when the — when the — I give a
(break in testimony)

LARRY LIEBER: …and I made it up.” He looked a little surprised and walked away, and then I stopped writing it and he would — I don’t know if he was writing it or somebody else, but they gave it another name, which I believe was the authentic name from Bulfinch’s Mythology. So …

Q: Was it the usual practice that you would write a book for a few issues and then you would move on to something else?

LARRY LIEBER: It seems that way. You know, I don’t remember. I — I’ve been looking at the books and it seems with a few of them I did. I – I wrote a few books, the first issue or the first couple issues, yes. I don’t, yeah, I don’t know how it came about that way and why I moved on. I don’t recall.

Q: Who would make the decision about who was going to write the scripts for a book?

LARRY LIEBER: It would be Stan, I’m sure, as the editor.

Q: Are you familiar with a comic called Iron Man?

LARRY LIEBER: Yes.

Q: And what was your involvement with Iron Man?

LARRY LIEBER: I wrote the first script for Iron Man also.

Q: And who asked you to write the first script for Iron Man?

LARRY LIEBER: Stan. Stan Lee.

Q: Stan Lee. And what — what did he provide you with or what did he ask you to do?

MR. TOBEROFF: Assumes facts.

LARRY LIEBER: I’m sorry, I –

Q: If you understand the question, you can –

MR. TOBEROFF: That’s okay. I’m just objecting for the record.
LARRY LIEBER: Oh, okay.

MS. SINGER: Lawyer stuff.

LARRY LIEBER: What was the question, if I may?

Q: Fair enough. How, how did you come to write the first script for Iron Man?

LARRY LIEBER: He made up a character and he wanted — and he asked me to write it. And he told me the plot, you know, somehow I got synopsis, and I — and I wrote it. And again, I made up the civilian name.

Q: And the “he” there is Stan Lee?

LARRY LIEBER: Thank me for Anthony Stark. I’m sorry, what?

Q: I’m sorry, the “he” in that was Stan Lee?

LARRY LIEBER: Yes, Stan Lee.

Q: So you came up with the name Anthony Stark?

LARRY LIEBER: Yes.

Q: And where did you come up with that name?

LARRY LIEBER: I don’t know, but I guess I — I had been writing so many. Again, either I just made it up or I felt it was a name that would fit a guy who was very, very rich and a lady – you know, I wanted — I thought it sounded distinguished and wealthy or something. Anthony Stark.
3. Serious Eats liked new food at Arby's: Arby's Angus Three Cheese and Bacon, Steakhouse Onion Rings and Inside-Out Cinnamon Bites.

*Buy Kirby: King of Comics at Amazon.
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Link roundup

1. 20% off t-shirts and posters at Zazzle all weekend with the code FFHSPRESIDAY. Perfect time to design a shirt featuring a certain chimera mascot. I've also recommended these Visit Endor shirts, Franco Brambilla's posters, and Steve Thomas's posters.

2. Wild story about Cincinnati Reds players humiliating Jay Mariotti.

3. Chris Sims recommends his favorite all-ages comics.
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