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Posts Tagged ‘Apple’

SF Sunday+: Ray Bradbury, An Ode to Videogames, Free Computer Science Course

Today in SF Sunday — loosely interpreted — we have a lovely post from the ever-insightful Brainpickings. Ray Bradbury, grandmaster of science fiction, offers advice to Snoopy (and by extension, us) on persevering in the face of rejection.

I’ve come to realize that no amount of success really takes the edge off of the fear or the sting of rejection. But it builds character, as Calvin’s dad was fond of saying, and makes success not only that much sweeter but possible in the first place. Mostly everything that’s done is a failure, and mostly everyone is bad at everything. That’s why talent stands out. And even if you have talent, you’re still going to produce a lot of crap. And even the best things you produce, the best things that anyone will ever produce, will eventually sink, all but forgotten, into the boiling sea of archetypes that is the collective human imagination.

I’m going to expand the concept of SF Sunday to include videogames (and probably every other field of creative endeavor). I very recently – as in two days ago – “rediscovered” videogames and what a balm to the soul they can be. I put “rediscovered” in quotes because I never stopped believing in the power of games — I just stopped availing myself of that power. From a life-consuming obsession in my formative years, to a mild Tetris obsession and then to virtually nothing during college (the odd Nintendo DS game being the rare exception), videogames were gradually edged out of my life.

Now the smartphone has remedied that. If you have an iPhone or an Android you can get Temple Run for free. The game is simplicity itself: run, jump, duck, and turn for your life, collecting coins and staying one step ahead of the weird demon-monkey creatures who want to devour your still-beating heart. And as an added bonus, you can (in the Android version at least) turn down the game sound and play your own music. Fleeing from the restless dead with an unholy relic in hand while “White Tooth Man” by Iron and Wine is one of the finest pleasures civilized life has to offer, if you ask me. It would be nice if you could select different avatars, but this is a relatively minor complaint**.

**Just checked the store. Minority characters are available, for a price payable in gold coins. Touche, Temple Run. Touche.

And for a mellower but equally addictive gaming experience, Osmos HD lets you guide a galactic mote into becoming bigger by absorbing smaller motes and avoiding larger ones. It sounds Darwinian, and it is. But it’s also calming, compelling, and a hell of a lot of fun. I don’t know if you can play your own music, but even if you could, the in-game music is no afterthought but a definite part of the experience. Osmos HD probably is as close to a meditative experience as you can have on the subway without decades of meditation under your belt chakra.

Finally, for those who love videogames but want to know what’s under the hood, Harvard is offering a free online course in computer science. Wired ran a review of a similar course offered by Stanford not too long ago, and if that’s any indication, the Harvard course is no lightweight offering. Extensive programming is part of the curriculum.

Finally, on a personal note, I have to start packing. Having a blog is a great excuse to procrastinate, by the by. Really looking forward to interning at COSMOS. Expect pictures and stories.

Daisey and This American Life, cont’d

The Daisey story continues to unfold, with Michael Wolff at the Guardian coming to Daisey’s defense on this basis: that Daisey writes well, and most journalists do not. More to the point – that Daisey makes his meaning felt with the audience, causing them to see the world in a new way; and most journalism uses “having the correct facts” as an cop-out for compelling prose.

It would be easy to dismiss Wolff’s argument as a variation on Daisey’s “different kind of truth” theme, but after reading, it strikes me as more nuanced than that and deserving of a fuller response.

Wolff’s contention has this going for it – most journalists probably are bad writers. Daisey is certainly a good one. All the facts in the world are useless if they don’t move people to act on them in a manner befitting their seriousness. If it were otherwise, we’d all talk to each other in pure mathematics, and there would be no pain in the world (possibly no pleasure, either).

Similarly, the standards for what does and does not constitute honesty in journalism is a *somewhat* blurred line. Gay Talese, for instance, didn’t strive for word-for-word accuracy with quotes. (To go even further back, G.K. Chesterton, that neglected giant – physically and figuratively – was famous for misquoting from memory; though in his day it amounted to a mere foible. It is hard to say how Chesterton would fare in the postmodern world.)

But I have to disagree with Wolff’s argument on just how blurry the line really is, and on how much the facts – the actual, factual facts – matter. For Wolff it seems to come down to an either/or proposition. Either you can have your precious facts served up lukewarm in a nice dull broth of swampwater prose (and hope you choke on it!), or you can feast on the rich banquet of well-written Greater Truths on offer from Mike Daisey, Truman Capote, and all the other fabulous misunderstood literati.

It doesn’t have to be that way. Or, to put it another way, it will always be that way.

Truly talented and hard-working journalists can, and do, present honest-to-God-this-really-happened facts in compelling and limpid prose. Likewise, talented and hard-working fabulists can, and do, use imagined or recreated people and events to make us confront and grapple with serious issues in the real world. (At this point let me give a brief shout-out to musicians, comedians, actors, and entertainers, who provide legitimately good things that fall outside of the purview of the current argument.)

Likewise, as no less an authority on lying in journalism than Jayson Blair has pointed out, we will always have liars with us in journalism. As I pointed out in my previous post, dramatists don’t get a pass when they lie about having their facts right in a context in which that’s expected of any human being.

And we will always have lousy writers with us – just as we will always have lousy poets, actors, electricians, doctors, lawyers, etc etc. Mediocrity is a fact of life. That’s why we value talent in the first place.

Wolff ends on this note:

Journalism today speaks to no one as passionately as it speaks to other journalists. Fewer and fewer people believe it, feel informed or entertained by it, or find themselves compelled to seek it out. The journalism priests would say that one reason for our ever-shrinking following is because sinners in the profession have undermined our credibility.

I would say it is because journalism – calling it so is a recent and self-serving bit of professional elevation – is not our real job; writing is. And it is not Mike Daisey’s factual lapses that we should be so focused on, but, rather, how he writes so well.

I would reply that maybe he has a point in his first paragraph; less of one, but still a point in the second. But in his own piece of self-serving rhetoric, Wolff draws a sharp either/or distinction between writing well and getting the facts right. If having the facts doesn’t excuse shoddy writing (and I agree that it shouldn’t), then neither does beautiful writing, in a context where the facts are expected to be right, excuse getting them wrong.

I consider myself a writer. When I write what constitutes journalism, I consider myself a writer who’d better have his facts straight. There’s no reason I can’t strive to do both, even if the next guy doesn’t know his ass from his elbow and couldn’t write well about it even if he did.

You’re not wrong, Mike Daisey. You’re just an asshole***.

***Disclaimer:

In this post, I refer to Mike Daisey as an “asshole.” I should say that I do not know Mike Daisey personally, and am inclined to think he is a perfectly likable fellow. The pop culture analogy I use to describe the situation, which is apt, happens to employ this particular expletive.

But my point about his lying stands. Reporters and dramatists are committed to truth; in each domain, a different kind of truth. But Daisey misrepresented the kind of truth he was presenting.

There’s a great scene in The Big Lebowski wherein a bone-weary Dude rebukes an oblivious Walter after a completely inappropriate blowup during a bowling match, in which Walter pulls a gun on poor Smokey to force him to accept a zero score for stepping over the line in a frame.

Behold!

I find this quote to apply very well to the Mike Daisey/This American Life brouhaha, with flamboyant, thick-as-a-brick, damn-the-torpedoes Mike providing a perfect stand-in for the infuriatingly obtuse Walter. Daisey simply will not give up his insistence that he did not lie, when the facts say that he clearly, unambiguously did.

His defense rests on two premises: one, that he is not a journalist but a dramatist, and is not beholden to the standards of truth demanded of journalists, even when he is presenting his story in a journalistic context; and two, that regardless of what he did and did not see, the facts that he reports accurately reflect the grim reality of electronics manufacture in China.

I’ll address the second premise first; in addressing it, I will inevitably address the first. NO ONE is contesting the facts of the awful conditions in FoxConn factories. NO ONE. This is repeatedly emphasized in the This American Life “Retraction” story and in every news story and commentary that has emerged on this topic, and yet Daisey still parrots it as though it somehow vindicates his dishonesty. It doesn’t.

The fact is that Ira Glass, has, as he said in the show, “the normal worldview.” When I say to you, “this happened to me,” it doesn’t matter if I’m a poet or a dramatist or a journalist or an electrician or a clown or whatever. The unspoken assumption is that I am not lying about the things I am relating having happened to me. End of story.

So no, Mike Daisey, you are not wrong about the facts. And your desire to make the facts known is, in itself, commendable. It is your willingness to co-opt those facts and personalize them, so as to put yourself at the center of the story, to bask in all that indignation, that rankles. It is the fact that even after it’s revealed that you did, indeed, lie, you insist on playing the martyr instead of just fessing up that in your zeal to prosecute Apple and FoxConn, you ended up fabricating evidence – evidence that did not need fabrication.

If the cause of Chinese factory conditions is damaged from this whole incident, it is you, and you alone, who are to blame. You did the damage. It was completely avoidable, in a way that would have diluted the impact of your drama not one iota. You elected not to avoid it.

You’re not wrong about FoxConn and Apple, Mr. Daisey. You’re just…well.