Bon Iver covering Bonnie Raitt is rather brilliant
No Alarm Friday is the perfect cure for sleep deficit
Three hours of interviews to (hopefully) fill my open position, then hitting the snowy roads of Minnesota
It seems like the tech press has almost become bored with Apple these days. I also sense that many people like to see the Android/iOS competition as the second coming of Mac versus Windows. Whatever. I still use the tools I like best and most of those still come from Cupertino. Are there things I still hate? Of course – looking at you iOS keyboard, OS X Finder and AppleID management.
Part of my job involves staying current with what everyone else is doing, so I’ve tested Windows 8, Android and Windows Phone. Some of it is OK, but at the end of the day, I still primarily use my MacBook Air, iPad mini and iPhone 5S.
When it came time to get a new personal phone, I decided to skip the lower cost 5C option and get a 32GB “space gray” 5S. The main differences for me were the faster processor, the better camera and the touchID sensor. Speed has been decent and the sensor is handier than I imagined (especially when buying items), but the camera hasn’t been as much of an improvement over the 5 as I had hoped. Granted, the old camera was still pretty great for a phone.
As for the other recent Apple announcements, I guess the only thing I’d buy right now (if I had the money) would be the Retina iPad mini. I thought the current work mini I have had a great screen and was plenty fast, so to get a new model that’s faster and sharper with no other tradeoff would be very nice. On the other hand, if I could get a phone that had a screen size somewhere between the 5S and the mini, I’d need only one iOS device. The iPad Airs are technically very nice, but I just don’t like that size in my hands.
In the laptop world, my true dream machine hasn’t been built yet. The new Retina MacBook Pros are nice, but I prefer the Air size and feel. Add a Retina screen to that, include a pooled LTE data connection and 1TB of SSD storage and it would be just about perfect. No real interest in the new Mac Pro for my needs…
I’d never buy an Xbox One, but the Verge review seems pretty negative for a brand new premier console
Looks like I’ll have to add Gary Clark Jr. to the list
Another resort treadmill 10K – this time with cable cross and the worst puck possession game by the Wild all season
Black Friday is our Super Bowl and we plan to win.
Hot Chicks Night @EatDrinkRabbit on 11/25 – all you can eat fried chicken for $25 (love the “2 hour limit” disclaimer)
I feel kinda dumb for not making the Carrie Brownstein – Portlandia – Sleater-Kinney connection until now
Resort Treadmill 10K – not my favorite thing, but gotta get Dopey in 50 days
Still catching up, so here’s the long overdue Dave Chappelle post about his late show one week ago at First Avenue in Minneapolis. I’m still in shock he did all of those shows (eight at First Ave, four more at the Pantages), followed by the late night basketball appearance at Target Center on Saturday night. It’s not totally unique (Denver got ten shows), but it was historic for First Avenue.
When this all started, it was just two nights (Monday & Tuesday), with early shows at 7pm and late shows at 10:30pm. With my work schedule, I tried right away to get tickets to the Monday early show, but they sold out first (at $55 per ticket). I did get two for the late show, which turned out to be the better value, seeing as how he performed for about three hours (we left at nearly 2:15am).
Chris Riemenschneider wrote about our show here, while his colleague Rohan Preston covered the early Monday show here (we heard that Slug from Atmosphere was at that one). I didn’t really see any reviews of the shows later in the week, but I’m sure they are out there somewhere. Everyone I know on Twitter that went later seemed to have a great time.
Chicago-based opener Azhar Muhammad Usman was really funny and a good choice to get the crowd warmed up. A DJ was playing music when the doors opened until the time Usman started his roughly 15 minute routine. A few more songs from the DJ during the brief intermission, then it was time for Dave.
It was really bizarre attending a general admission seated show at First Avenue, but I liked it. Supposedly they only sold 500 tickets for each session, which was later supplemented somehow with standing room only GA tickets (that must have been fun for the floor staff to enforce). We were lucky to be under the heaters at the front of the line and got seats in the second row.
The no pictures, no talking and no heckling signs were up everywhere and overall the crowd was well behaved. There was lots of interaction towards the end that was borderline heckling, but he brought that on himself (asking questions, taking requests, calling on individuals, etc.). I wish our audience would have asked smarter questions, but it was still cool to see him be so open.
The start of the show was a little more scripted – like a regular prepared stand up routine. He talked about the incident in Hartford, his family and even pulled out Lil Wayne a few times (the Lil Wayne CSI bit was one of my favorites of the night, as was his Eddie Vedder impersonation). We really didn’t get any of his regular Chappelle Show sketch characters, though.
As the night went on, he kept smoking and drinking and basically ran out of prepared material. The last hour or so was basically just him talking about whatever popped into his head – Purple Rain, Prince, Minneapolis, movies, strip clubs. At first I was a little disappointed to not see more prepared stuff, but after it was over, I felt like I had just hung out with a good friend all night.
He’s Rick James, bitch!
Big congrats to kid one on making the high school speech team this year
Holy crap – only 50 days until WDW Marathon weekend?!?