On Writing Well

Columnist and editor John Leo gave a speech at Ursinus College last year in which he addresses inflated bureaucratic and academic language, the notion of “correctness,” and clarity of voice and style. He covers such a wide range of subjects that it’s hard to pick a good teaser, but here’s a short excerpt: When you write, how will you sound? Many … 

Erudition.

Behold: “100 Words That All High School Graduates — And Their Parents — Should Know,” as chosen by the editors of the American Heritage dictionaries. If nothing else, it makes for a great band name generator. I hereby lay claim to “kinetic kowtow,” “fatuous xenophobe,” and “vacuous nanotechnology” — though I shall probably shorten the last to “vacuous nanotech,” once … 

Summertime III: The Reconnoitering

Film Studies prof. David Bordwell discusses the concept of the film sequel with a group of cronies on his blog: Facing a summer packed with sequels, a journalist gets fed up.… Sequels prove that Hollywood lacks imagination and is interested only in profits. Sequel films are boring and repetitious. They rarely match the original in quality. And when good directors … 

Are You Going To Eat That?

Ran across this photo set today: Underground menu at L’Enclume. If you’ve never seen molecular gastronomy up-close and personal before, here’s your chance—intimate photos of a 24-course meal that’s a blend of science, art, and food. That picture to the left there, for instance, is of a dish labeled “Whim 03”: The white block was an impossibly light, and yet completely … 

Running the Numbers

Wow. Photographer Chris Jordan has some sample images from his new exhibition online. He writes: This new series looks at contemporary American culture through the austere lens of statistics. Each image portrays a specific quantity of something: fifteen million sheets of office paper (five minutes of paper use); 106,000 aluminum cans (thirty seconds of can consumption) and so on. My …