zerohour | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 05 2008 | of, people, blogs, mortgage, crisis
A link to a link.
From Crimeth.Inc:
Our favorite radio show, This American Life, recently did a hour show examining the current mortgage crisis— the straw that broke the camel’s back and triggered a global financial crisis, the end of which is nowhere in sight. As the U.S. stumbles forward deeper and deeper into a recession, it would behoove those of us who don’t understand what has happened to take a minute to learn about the economic process—which was truly not a major aberration from business as usual—behind the credit collapse that has many economists warning of a new economic depression.
As usual, TAL makes the dry subject matter absolutely fascinating and entertaining, interviewing victims and perpetrators at every level of the travesty, and as they say:
We explain it all to you. What does the housing crisis have to do with the turmoil on Wall Street? Why did banks make half-million dollar loans to people without jobs or income? And why is everyone talking so much about the 1930s? It all comes back to the Giant Pool of Money.
Listen to the show here, for free, by clicking on the ‘Full Episode’ link. For those looking for more details, another radio favorite of ours, Fresh Air, has some more perspectives here, and here. And of course, Wikipedia comes through with 12,000 words on the subject.
zerohour | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 15 2008 | of, chicago, people
i just picked up McDonough and Braungart's book Cradle to Cradle and noticed in the back that chi-town is listed as one of their partners. This is McDonough's overview of the partnership. It's a little lacking on details, but as far as I know Chicago is the only city that has seriously considered Cradle to Cradle for city renovation.
also, the book is freaking awesome from a fetishist's perspective. it smells like no other book i have ever smelled and it is almost infinitely eraseable. i underlined a bunch of stuff on one page with a fine pen, took a wet washcloth, and successfully scrubbed off all the marks and underlinings without damage to either 'paper' or ink. pretty pretty cool...
ShareViewed: 6 Times
zerohour | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 11 2008 | of, people, bbc
Understanding urban and rural spaces on the basis of mixed use is pretty amazing.
Quoted: A US charity helps Detroit's poorest people turn vacant lots into blooming gardens, the BBC's Matt Wells finds.
ShareViewed: 6 Times
zerohour | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 05 2008 | of, peoplepoor kobayashi...
Quoted: He was trying to reclaim his title after a disappointing three-dog loss last year to Californian Joey Chestnut shattered his six-year winning streak. But it ...
ShareViewed: 2 Times
zerohour | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 04 2008 | of, world, people
so effing stupid...
Quoted: Page last updated at 16:41 GMT, Thursday, 3 July 2008 17:41 UK E-mail this to a friend Printable version Bright ideas in the Wild West ...
ShareViewed: 10 Times- Can a night owl become a morning person? A Slate experiment. - By Deepa Ranganathan - Slate Magazine
zerohour | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 17 2008 | of, people, sleep
Wow. I'm trying this. I need to be able to wake up at six in the morning with a full night's sleep for the day of my departure. I've been consistently waking up at 10:30 for the first time in 9 months (that's early for me). tomorrow I make it 9:30.
Quoted: I looked like a cross between Bono and Henry Kissenger...So this is what being a morning person is like, I thought. It's like being 80 years old.
ShareViewed: 6 Times
zerohour | Shared With: Everyone - May 25 2008 | of, people, books
listening to this now. he makes a few decent brief points about prospects for the 2008 elections, the notion of the collective act, the emergence of new evental sites, and so on...the second part of the interview was aired on may 12.
edit: oh damn...i just read this from the transcript while the audio's downloading:
Quoted: Today’s legacy of that ’68 is alive. And, you know, they have in California, and now it’s spreading to Europe, a terrible thing called masturbation. People gather, you masturbate publicly, you’re not allowed to touch the other, and, of course, each one has to pay some money, which goes to politically correct causes and so on. And the idea, it’s like self-expression: you are alone, but in a crowd. This kind of—this is what I don’t like.
Quoted: Slavoj Žižek, the renowned philosopher, psychoanalyst and cultural theorist, joins us in our firehouse studio for a wide-ranging discussion. Žižek has been called "the Elvis of cultural theory" and is widely considered to be one of Europe's leading intellectuals. He has written more than fifty books and speaks to sold-out audiences around the world. [includes rush transcript]
ShareViewed: 2 Times
zerohour | Shared With: Everyone - May 19 2008 | of, comedy, people
tfwright redot....there seriously needs to be more david cross to laugh at...
Quoted: Odenkirk and Cross worked this closely was on Mr. Show and
ShareViewed: 6 Times
zerohour | Shared With: Everyone - May 16 2008 | of, world, people
mmm--ghghghgh, omg-nom-nom, guh! GNOM! Gruh--uh, oh, oh yeah--so...
so...
so tasty....*lipsmack*
Quoted: Cheese contains tryptophan, an amino acid that has been found to relieve stress and induce sleep...Government-imposed pasteurization is, itself, controversial. Some say these worries are overblown, pointing out that pasteurization of the milk used to make cheese does not ensure its safety in any case...This is supported by statistics showing that in Europe (where young raw-milk cheeses are still legal in some countries), most cheese-related food poisoning incidents were traced to pasteurized cheeses.
ShareViewed: 2 Times
zerohour | Shared With: Everyone - May 13 2008 | of, music, people, chicago, activism, culture, politics, news
I just found out about a recent push in city government for an "Events Promoters" ordinance that would force competely unrealistic criteria upon small events promotors. The effects of this ordinance are potentially disastrous for local and independent music and theater.
Quoted: Imagine a Chicago with no Metro or Double Door...
ShareViewed: 2 Times

Send SAWED-OFF SMILER BLOOD MAGNET a friend request or a personal message instead.