movie – Mr. Brooks

A film starring Kevin Costner and Demi Moore. …

Is this 1997?

Or 2007?

It has the difficult-for-me-to-remember title Mr. Brooks.

But when I saw it also featured William Hurt, I suddenly got interested. He’s one of the best and most fascinating actors working today. I love all his movies — except the one for which he won the Academy Award, Kiss of the Spider Woman.

For Hurt, I saw the movie. It is excellent and I’m still thinking about it.

Costner and Moore were terrific too. (Kevin Costner makes a much better villain than hero.)

William Hurt steals every scene he is in, playing the challenging role of Costner’s invisible, enthusiastically sadistic alter ego, Marshall.

Mr. Brooks

Mr. Brooks

Thumb’s UP.

trailer – Apple

By the way, Into the Wild (my review on BestHike) included William Hurt in a minor role.

60 Minutes – interview with 7yr-old Afghani

Yes, the Russians were worse. The Taliban were worse. It will likely be worse when Coalition forces, including Canada, finally leave.

But ask the 7-year-old survivor of an American bomb strike in Afghanistan (not Iraq) what he thinks of the USA after his entire family was killed. Not by accident. They targeted his family home because intelligence said two bad guys were being sheltered there.

This makes me angry. What would I do when I grew up if I was this young boy?

60minutes.jpgThe TV show 60 Minutes is one of the best of American media. I rarely see the show, but can subscribe to the podcast.

A recent episode blew me away. The President of Afghanistan, an ally, asked George Bush privately to reduce the number of air strikes on his country. When that had no effect, he went public on 60 Minutes.

Turns out the American military has a formula for how many civilian casualties are acceptable when trying to blow up one bad guy with a computer guided 2000lb bomb.

This is not new. My hero Gandhi spent many years weighing how many hundreds of thousands would die when the British left India.

Problem for the US military, however, is that they rarely blow up the bad guy. Air strikes are easy. They only cost money, not American soldier’s lives.

Needless to say, there were no bad guys in the 7-year-old’s house. American troops had searched it just the day before.

You should listen to to the audiocast of that show.

President Hamid Karzai tells Scott Pelley that too many civilians are being killed in U.S. bombing raids on Afghanistan.

60 Minutes Archive, – CBS News official website

You can see some of the (slow streaming) video here.

win an audio book from Rick

I recently read listened to an audio book called I Am America (And So Can You!) by Stephen Colbert.

Now if you love Colbert, you will love this book.

If you really love Colbert (as I do) you will really love this book.

He’s a one trick pony — making fun of stuffy right-wing mentality by pretending to be a diehard right-winger himself.

I Am America (And So Can You!)

I Am America (And So Can You!)

The contest:

Brian challenged me to come up with a new word to properly describe the process of listening to an audio book. A new verb.

Not “read”. Not “listen”.

Whoever comes up with the best neologism wins a free Audible.com audio book from RickMcCharles.com !!

Contact me.

fastest Vista notebook … is a Mac

Well, well, well.

Not sure why you would want to run the Vista operating system, but if you do — buy an Apple laptop.

The fastest Windows Vista notebook we’ve tested this year is a Mac. Try that again: The fastest Windows Vista notebook we’ve tested this year–or for that matter, ever–is a Mac. Not a Dell, not a Toshiba, not even an Alienware. The $2419 (plus the price of a copy of Windows Vista, of course) MacBook Pro’s PC WorldBench 6 Beta 2 score of 88 beats Gateway’s E-265M by a single point, but the MacBook’s score is far more impressive simply because Apple couldn’t care less whether you run Windows.

PC World – In Pictures: The Most Notable Notebooks of 2007

Apple MacBook Pro MA897LL/A 17\

Apple MacBook Pro MA897LL/A 17″ Notebook PC (2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 2 GB RAM, 160 GB Hard Drive, DVD/CD SuperDrive)

Facebook toast?

Everybody loved Facebook. Even Google.

But it looks to me like the value of the super successful upstart company has peaked. After choosing Microsoft rather than Google for a partnership recently, big G dropped the bomb, Open Social.

It’s a different Facebook killer than I had expected.

Only a first step on the road to all things Google socially networked.

Facebook, you’re on notice now, you’ve got to rev the innovation machine up to red line and fast or you’re toast. Google’s OpenSocial is going to eat your lunch, and breakfast and dinner. At this point (1:00 PM PT), just about everyone except Facebook is signing onto OpenSocial, including MySpace …

blognation Canada » Blog Archive » Facebook’s Feet of Clay

Facebook will be forced to join the Google consortium of social networks and the compelling reason to join Facebook — that your friends are there — will be gone.

Once again Google is on exactly the right track. I love the OpenSocial concept.

… PS. My own Facebook traffic seems to be in decline.

my audiocasts

I was telling Ron, having given up on radio, and music, I now listen almost exclusively to audio instead.

Audio books I buy from Audible.com for about $12 each.

But Audiocasts (podcasts) are almost all free. I subscribe in iTunes to these:

dailypodcasts.pngBuzz Out Loud
David Pogue
I, Cringely
iLifeZone
net@nite
The WordPress Podcast

Best of National Geographic
National Geographic News
Nature PBS

Boing Boing Boing
Lonely Planet Travelcasts

PRI: Living on Earth
Pulse of the Planet

The Wildebeat

New York Times Front Page
The Economist
Slate
60 Minutes
FRONTLINE PBS

This American Life

NPR: Movies
On the Media
WNYC’s Radio Lab

Flames Cast (NHL hockey)
The Reporters (TSN Sports)
Onion Radio News
Best of Chris Moyles

CBC Radio: Editor’s Choice
CBC Radio: Best of DNTO

If any of these look interesting, just search in Google for the “podcast” of that name. You can listen to a sample. Even easier, download iTunes software to your computer and subscribe to the podcasts of your choice there.

Like most people, I tend to listen to ALL of a few favourites. But only a few of most of the above.

If you have other favourites, leave a comment below and I will check them out.

Apple – Mac OS X Leopard – Guided Tour

Will be released Friday, Oct. 26th.

Looks great. Check out a 20min video tutorial:

Apple – Mac OS X Leopard – Guided Tour

leopard.jpg

I may switch over to all Mac applications soon. (Dropping Microsoft Entourage for Apple Mail, for example.)

my Mexican Dental Vacation

dr-stephen-mackey-smiling3.jpgThis is Dr. Stephen F. Mackey, my dentist in Mazatlán.

UPDATE – Dr. Mackey wrote to say: “I am no longer affiliated with Mexican Dental Vacation and do not reccomend them.” Also, they’ve moved to the Golden Zone and, last I heard, do not have a full-time dentist on staff.

The rest of the original post below:

He practiced for over 40 years in the Seattle, Washington area. Finally, after some minor heart trouble, the doctor decided to leave the rainy Pacific N.W. and head for the sun.

Mexican Dental Vacation, the business, was founded by a Canadian Nick Konev from Alberta. Nick recognized the opportunity to sell dental work at 50% the cost or less than what it costs in Canada and the USA.

This was my third time visiting a dentist in Mexico, but the first to have MAJOR work done.

My trip was precipitated when a big chunk of one of my front teeth fell out. I took that as a sign that I had put off major work for too long. I booked a trip to Mexico immediately.

I had done some research and the buzz on-line was generally very good for a company called Mexican Dental Vacation that caters almost exclusively to Gringos. I like that they are up front with the cost of work, posting it on-line, and stick to those prices.

On arrival Dr. Mackey drove me over to get a panoramic X-ray as I brought none with me from Canada. No appointment. No referral. Imagenes Diagnosticas de Mazatlan $18 was a brilliant beginning.

I was in and out of X-ray in 15min while the Doctor popped into Home Depot for building supplies. (In Mexico only 3 months, he was still making himself at home here.)

That same morning the doctor laid out his recommendations. He feels I need bigtime work.

We decided I would get 7 root canals, have four teeth extracted, and do some minor repairs this trip. Then, in future, as time and cash permit, put in 3 bridges and as many as 10 crowns. He did not feel I needed any implants.

To keep costs down, as much work as possible is farmed out to local Mexican dentists. I was sent to get my root canals done by Dr. Ernesto Bertrand Morales. He was excellent, doing 7 in 4 appointments over 5 days. Only one caused me any pain. The doctor recommended a pain killer called Flanex. I didn’t need it.

I like the personal attention you get here. None of that sitting in a chair waiting for someone jumping from patient-to-patient to finally attend you.

My cleaning was well done by the office of Dr. Roberto Coppel Azcona, the most posh dental office I have ever seen. It was a little too “Western” for me.

I had a couple of days recovery, then went to get 4 teeth extracted by Dr. Mackey in one appointment. Though that is a lot of freezing, this was supposed to be the least of my worries.

People ask me, “Rick — what if something goes WRONG when you are getting medical attention in a foreign country?

That is a good question. My extractions went very, very WRONG.

Though my teeth have been poor my entire life, for some reason they do not want to be removed from my body. I was one of the most difficult patients Dr. Mackey could recall.

Finally, he decided to sent me to a dental surgeon. He and the dental assistant both drove me while I was still frozen.

The Mexican surgeon saw me immediately, but also had mucho problemas despite having a full surgical set-up. I was also one of his most difficult patients ever.

I don’t think anyone counted how many sutures I had in my mouth. Plenty.

On to antibiotics (Dalacin C / Clindamincina), an anti-inflamatory and yet more rest.

Dr. Mackey decided to do just one post / repair and save everything else for the future. I plan to return late January 2008.

All in all, I was very happy with Mexican Dental Vacation. There was no language barrier at any office. The city of Mazatlán is clean and modern. And certainly safer than Calgary or Seattle.

My COSTS aside from airfare:

$50 / day total – hotel, food, etc.

$18 – X-rays at Imagenes Diagnosticas de Mazatlan
free – quotation on work
$290 / root canal
$60 / extraction
$70 – cleaning

They guarantee their work for a period of 2 years.

mexicandentalvacation.jpg

Dr. Mackey drove me to the airport. When is the last time your dentist did anything like that for you?

Next time you get a quotation for work from your dentist, check this chart:

prices1.gif
prices2.gif

Mexican Dental Vacation – official website

Contact me if you have any specific questions.

palmcorder – Sony HDR-CX7

The best competitor to the Panasonic HDC-SD5, I think.

Sony HDR-CX7 AVCHD 6.1MP High Definition Flash Memory Camcorder with 10x Optical Zoom

Sony HDR-CX7 AVCHD 6.1MP High Definition Flash Memory Camcorder with 10x Optical Zoom

It’s more expensive than the Panasonic and uses dread memory stick rather than my preferred SD card. But the still camera is 6.1MP Sony vs 2.3MP Panasonic.

There are an equal number of pros and cons, so far as I can see.

Leave a comment if you have any opinion on the new flash memory camcorders.

book – A Thousand Splendid Suns

I had mixed feelings while reading the second novel by Khaled Hosseini of Kite Runner fame and infamy.

Certainly it’s not as strong as Kite Runner.

I bought the audio book anyway because the subject is so important to me: the plight of Islamic women.

Too bad Hosseini is so predictably sentimental. From the New York Times, MICHIKO KAKUTANI:

And like its predecessor, it features some embarrassingly hokey scenes that feel as if they were lifted from a B movie, and some genuinely heart-wrenching scenes that help redeem the overall story.

It could be a fantastic book, but isn’t.

Yet, I will likely still read Hosseini’s next book. And watch the inevitably successful movies adapted from them.

I guess I’m hooked.

A Thousand Splendid Suns

A Thousand Splendid Suns