plop, plop, transubstantiation

Meagan Day (writing in Full Stop) on Joan Didion (writing in the New York Review of Books in 1989) on Ronald Reagan:

Didion’s opinion of the President himself is best exemplified in an anecdote she recounts in which the Reagans, while traveling during the 1980 campaign, attended a rural church service. Their pew-side experience up to this point had mostly been at places like Bel Air Presbyterian, where during communion congregants treated themselves to individual circular wafers and drank wine out of small cups passed around on a tray. When communion began at the small Virginia church, Nancy Reagan was scandalized that people were all drinking from the same cup. Her aid, registering her panic, assured her that she could just dip the bread in the wine; frazzled, she dropped it in. Ronald Reagan — on autopilot, as if he were reading from a teleprompter — followed suit by confidently plopping his bread into the chalice, never comprehending his mistake, his face radiating piety as his wife and aid looked on mortified. After the final hymn he stood outside the chapel shaking hands and nodding with interest. Here was the President, “insufficiently briefed (or, as they say in the White House, ‘badly served’) on the wafer issue but moving ahead, stepping ‘into the sunlight,’ satisfied with his own and everyone else’s performance, apparently oblivious to (or inured to, or indifferent to) the crises being managed in his presence.”

Funny story but it would mean the Reagans had never been to a Catholic or Episcopal church, where communicants routinely chalice-sip. Is it possible Ron's and Nancy's bubble of conservative SoCal cluelessness extended this far? Guess so if this happened the way Didion tells it. Meagan Day's article reiterates what we all knew in the '80s: that Reagan was (to use that decade's phrase) an "amiable dunce" who acted as a Trojan Horse for vicious neoconservatives (whom she calls neoliberals but the point is the same).

pacific rimmed 2

SM: How did Pacific Rim end? I got 3D battlebot fatigue (enhanced by the size of the screen at the Uptown) and ducked out as Stringer Bell was suiting up for definitive Megatronage.

TM: I saw it in 2D (with earplugs) so I could make it to the end.
The tattooed nerd mindmelds with a Kaiju and learns that the spacetime link will explode unless alien DNA comes into the link first.
Stringer dies by exploding the bomb that was supposed to go with them into the gate, buying our heroes time to get a dead alien and take it into the gate with them for its DNA identification. (I think - it was all pretty confusing.)
Because their old Jaeger is "analog" and "nuclear powered" they can turn it into a bomb.
They enter the gate and we get a brief glimpse of the Kaiju world with a baby Kaiju looking up expectantly. The bomb explodes, sealing the gate, and our heroes escape in pods just in the nick.
After the credits Ron Perlman slashes his way out of the Kaiju that has eaten him.

pacific rimmed

kaiju100plantain

Above are some of Pacific Rim's Kaiju monsters training to battle Earth's giant Jaeger robots before going through the undersea crack in spacetime.

OK, Pacific Rim is entertaining and stupid, as befits a director whose Spanish name translates as William O'Bull. An awe-inspiring melange of gigantism and cavernous spaces.

Was thinking about connections to Japan's Neon Genesis Evangelion:

Giant robots battle alien invaders.
Technicians anxiously watch videogame screens and fret about "sync ratios."
Flashbacks to early appearances of the monsters -- monsters menace small children.
World-weary commander with dark secrets.

But this is just an amiable popcorn movie so nothing really dark happens. The "good" robots don't actually contain biological components of bad aliens, Stringer Bell isn't using children to bring about the apocalypse and/or revive his dead wife, etc.

Stanley Tigerman & G. T. Crabtree

Drawings by the above two accompanying architect Tigerman's 1975 paper "The Formal Generators of Structure," via dataisnature:

Tigerman_01

Tigerman_09

Tigerman_07

Pre-digital design madness. Could also be called "The Structural Generators of Form" or "Look at Our New Rapidograph." Note the apotheosis of the hashtag.