- Dwight Eisenhower: Supreme Commander of NATO right before becoming President.
- Harry Truman: Senator, then VP to FDR.
- FDR: Senator, then Governor of New York, then President.
- Herbert Hoover: Secretary of Commerce, then President.
- Calvin Coolidge: Governor of Massachusetts, VP, then President.
- Warren Harding: the first sitting Senator to become President.
- Woodrow Wilson: Governor of New Jersey, then President.
- Williant Taft: Secretary of War, then President.
- Teddy Roosevelt: Governor of New York, VP, then President.
Friday, January 26, 2007
Deeper Look Into Past Presidents
So, I was curious as to the other previous presidents and their career before becoming president.
My First Run With A Mod Tracker
As I mentioned earlier, I've been playing around with Mod Trackers for authoring and remixing music. As I've discovered, it all depends upon getting really high quality samples. A few days ago I finished my first attempt at one of these. The mixing needs some work, but overall I'm fairly happy with the outcome.
Now I just need to find some way to get that file onto this site...
Now I just need to find some way to get that file onto this site...
Tuesday, January 23, 2007
Senators Should Stop Running For President
Has anyone else noticed that current U.S. senators just aren't elected president? You have to go all the way back to JFK before you find a President who wasn't in the Executive Branch before becoming President. Here's a quick rundown of the list:
- George W. Bush: Govenor of Texas
- Bill Clinton: Govenor of Arkansas
- George H. W. Bush: Senator, yes, but also was Director of The CIA under Ford, and was Vice President before being elected President.
- Ronald Reagan: Govenor of California
- Jimmy Carter: Govenor of Georga
- Gerald Ford: Congressman, then VP, then President.
- Richard Nixon: Congressman & Senator, then VP, then President.
- LBJ: Senator, then VP, then President.
- JFK: Senator then President.
Sunday, January 7, 2007
A Meta-Blog
I've started a category for this blog called "meta-blog," and retroactively adjusted some category names. Just as "meta-data" is data about data, a "meta-blog," then, would be a blog about blogs. Although, like this post, I mix terms and blog about blogging. That makes me wonder, what would the verb be for blogging about blogging? I'd probably just end up "verbing" the word nad say "meta-blogging."
("Verbing" is my term for turning a noun into a verb, such as "benchmarking" or "blogging.")
This just makes me wonder just how much meta-blogging people do. Chalk me up on that list.
("Verbing" is my term for turning a noun into a verb, such as "benchmarking" or "blogging.")
This just makes me wonder just how much meta-blogging people do. Chalk me up on that list.
Saturday, January 6, 2007
The Craft of Clapping
Years ago, I worked as a stage hand for the José Greco Dance Company, back when José Sr. was still in the show (now, Pépé, his son, leads it). I learned there two forms of clapping - what they called the Flaminco style and the Arabic style. I found the different sounds they produced fascinating then, and I still practice and experiment with different clapping sounds.
The Arabic style was the easiest to learn. You shape your hands into a tiger-claw shape, and bring them together so that the fingers interlock. The sound is produced from the two cups of the palms coming together.
The Flaminco style, however, is much more difficult. In it, you bring the fingers from one hand over the cup of the second hand, and the second hand's heel hits the first hand's cup. The sound is very distinct, and appears in all kinds of Spanish music. I've been practicing it off and on for years, and I still have trouble finding the "sweet spot" that makes this sound.
Today, I happened to be wearing a cheap pair of latex gloves, and I found that wearing those while clapping added a nice "snap" to the sound.
The Arabic style was the easiest to learn. You shape your hands into a tiger-claw shape, and bring them together so that the fingers interlock. The sound is produced from the two cups of the palms coming together.
The Flaminco style, however, is much more difficult. In it, you bring the fingers from one hand over the cup of the second hand, and the second hand's heel hits the first hand's cup. The sound is very distinct, and appears in all kinds of Spanish music. I've been practicing it off and on for years, and I still have trouble finding the "sweet spot" that makes this sound.
Today, I happened to be wearing a cheap pair of latex gloves, and I found that wearing those while clapping added a nice "snap" to the sound.
Thursday, January 4, 2007
Unfortunate Predictions
Soon after the original movie Mission: Impossible came out, after I realized why Peter Graves wouldn't be caught dead in it, I started making jokes about what shows they'll turn into movies:
I should have put on the bad cartoons I used to watch, because then I would have picked up Duddly Do-Right, Rocky & Bulwinkle, and Scooby Doo.
Here's to watching The Greatest American Hero movie in 2010!
- The Dukes of Hazzard
- Starsky and Hutch
- Miami Vice
- Lost in Space
- Shaft
- The Mod Squad
- Get Smart
- CHiPs
- The Prisoner
- The A-Team
- Battle Star Galactica
- V
- Space: 1999
- Buck Rodgers
- The Greatest American Hero
- 21 Jump Street
- Cop Rock
I should have put on the bad cartoons I used to watch, because then I would have picked up Duddly Do-Right, Rocky & Bulwinkle, and Scooby Doo.
Here's to watching The Greatest American Hero movie in 2010!
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