New Angels ace pitcher injured in less than 5 innings

This is why we can’t have anything nice.

  • Share/Bookmark

This Dr. Phil blows up more than people’s marriages

I read Dr. Phil Plait’s marvelous  Bad Astronomy when it came out, and I’m halfway through Death From the Skies, so I was jazzed to meet Phil yesterday at Comic-Con.

Cool enough that he was funny and personable, but even cooler:  Phil just got his own show on the Discovery Channel.

  • Share/Bookmark

Afghanistan war a mess? How is this even news?

If you’ve been paying attention all along (or if you’d read Who Hates Whom, if I may plug), there’s not much in the WikiLeaks release that’s actually surprising.

For more, read Fred Kaplan in Slate Magazine.

  • Share/Bookmark

Why you do NOT want to eat stadium food in Florida

ESPN – What’s lurking in your stadium food?

Ewww. Click the “% of vendors in violation” buttons and watch Florida light up when it gets nasty.

  • Share/Bookmark

Comic-Con’s genius slogan

“Celebrating the popular arts.”

At last — somebody standing up for things everyone already likes.

  • Share/Bookmark

My Keynote Talk on the Web, Global Culture, and Monumental Screw-ups – Now on YouTube

Update: welcome to everyone popping over from my Peru travelogue on BoingBoing.net today.  I think you’ll particularly dig the videos.

Oh — and if you imagine your group would want me to come by and speak, here’s who you want to call.


Last year I was asked by Web Directions North, a gathering of assorted bigshots from Google, Yahoo!, etc. — people who literally convene to design the next phases of the Internet itself — to deliver the closing keynote.  The subject?  The future of the Internet’s influence on global culture and politics.

Naturally, my take on it was illustrated with people dancing in the streets, teenage males being given fake boobs, and coffee made from civet poop.  

I’m happy to tell you it got a long standing ovation.

And now you can see the whole talk online here.

It’s broken into bite-size pieces, organized loosely by the point I’m making, each about the length of a pop song.

The first chunk is below. If you dig it, click to the YouTube page with the whole shebang.

  • Share/Bookmark

Thanks again to PAAC

Quick note of appreciation to the good folks at the Pacific Asian Affairs Council, who brought me out to Honolulu, set me up at the University of Hawaii, and arranged for me to keynote their summit on microfinance.

I had a total blast and met a ton of cool people.  And seeing so many young people get excited about a sense of connection with the developing world, and the ability to touch lives halfway across the globe — that gave me a huge boost of enthusiasm for my own work.  So I definitely received at least as good as I gave.

Thanks to everyone at PAAC.  Hope to see a bunch of you in Vietnam next!

  • Share/Bookmark

The Bones episode what I done writ

Bones

In case you missed it, I was asked to write a Bones episode this year, it aired a couple of weeks ago… and here it is, available for streaming at the network’s website.

Incidentally, even though it says "Written by" and then my name in the credits, stuff like this is always a massively shared enterprise, so credit belongs in huge part with the entire writing and producing staff.

Very cool and fun bunch of people. And I’m happy to report it was their highest-rated episode since 2008!

Great experience, this was. Thanks to everyone involved!

  • Share/Bookmark

Twitter feed taking over for a bit – jumping for joy

Fortunately, webmaster Colin has updated our software, one benefit of which is that my Twitter feed can now appear in the right-hand column.  If everything works (including me), there should be photos, links, and all sorts of goodness over there.  Longer posts will still go in this space.

 

Another effect of the changes: the addresses of many articles here have changed, so inbound links from other sites may be broken.  If you’ve wound up here on the main page by accident, that’s why the search box is now near the top of the page.

 


 

You may also find some odd formatting and such while we clean up the loose ends, but things mostly seem to be working out great.  And if the page is displaying at a funky width, there are little white icons at the far upper right for twiddling with that.

 

January 18, 2010 – working on some critical bugs – Expect brief outages. 99% there.

  • Share/Bookmark

My new New York Times puzzle is up

Circular Reasoning, a new puzzle I designed and wrote for the op-ed section of the New York Times, is up!

My brief companion essay is here, and the introductory essay by novelist Arthur Phillips, who introduced me to the editors, is here.

It’s meant to be hard and yet amusing enough that you’ll want to share it with a friend or family member and work it together as part of your long holiday weekend.  Did my best, anyway.  Enjoy!

  • Share/Bookmark

Too bad the Emmys aren’t this smart

Jane accepts the Program of the Year award for Battlestar Galactica at the Television Critics Association Awards on Saturday.

Sample Image

I think the other three women were her backup singers.

  • Share/Bookmark

The New Xerox Logo and the Kyrgyzstan Flag

I just saw the new Xerox logo for the first time (I guess I don’t buy office equipment much) in the background of the Dodgers game.  My first thought: why did Xerox (left) adopt the symbol on the Kyrgyzstan flag (right)?

Sample Image Sample Image

Obviously a coincidence.  Still: small, weird planet we live on.

  • Share/Bookmark

If you came here from the TV, looking for the book…

If you’re looking for the book that Jeopardy! mentioned out loud tonight (!):

Sample Image

It’s right here:

Sample Image

And while you’re here, kick off your shoes, poke around, scroll down, hit the Travel or the FAQ if you’re curious or click over to the Trebekistan section if you want more Jeopardy!-related stuff, and otherwise make yourself at home. Thanks for stopping by.

  • Share/Bookmark

Why America Needs Better Scohols

Sample Image
No comment possible.
  • Share/Bookmark

A Twitter-length post only seems appropriate here

CNN trying to look cutting-edge by using Twitter is like 1950s radio trying to look high-tech by describing what’s on TV.

(btw, if you haven’t noticed, you can follow my own Twitter feed here.  Enjoy my random brain farts of 140 characters or less!)

  • Share/Bookmark
  • Actual Books

    Who Hates Whom
    Who Hates Whom:

    Well-Armed Fanatics,
    Intractable Conflicts,

    and Various Things Blowing Up
    A Woefully Incomplete Guide™

    “Revelatory... Harris's sly wit and infectious curiosity make understanding world chaos fascinating... witty, horrific, and necessary.”

    -- Boston Globe


    "Brave... irreverent... charges into the thick of the globe's myriad simmering wars... hilariously relaxed."

    -- New York Observer


    “Fascinating, enlightening, and surprisingly: NOT TOTALLY DEPRESSING.”

    -- John Hodgman,
    author, The Areas of My Expertise and correspondent for The Daily Show

     


    "A rollicking ride of intellectual discovery and emotional growth... his comic timing never fails"
    -- The Wall Street Journal

    "A surprisingly touching memoir"
    -- Entertainment Weekly

    "Effortlessly funny and informative... tender, human, and very wise... A must for anyone who loves Jeopardy!, or has ever seen it, or is breathing."
    -- Joss Whedon, creator, Buffy the Vampire Slayer


  • Sponsored Travel Links

  • Page Ranking

  • Advertise with Bob

    Looking to advertise on BobHarris.com? Yes, we do text links and banners at very reasonable rates.

    No, we do not do link exchanges because they are rarely of any benefit to us.

    BobHarris.com has a very visible and high profile presence on the information super-highway and we would be very happy to discuss your paid advertising needs.

    Send me a note!