Category Archives: Texana

White Shoulders

So I stopped at H.E.B. the other day to pick up a few things and also to get a flu shot and I was standing in line for the shot and I smelled some perfume that was very familiar, though it took a few seconds to remember why and what it was.

White Shoulders. A girl I dated in high school, more than fifty years ago, wore it. I asked the attractive, fiftyish woman who seemed to be wearing it if it was, indeed, WS. She said yes and how did I know. I explained. She laughed.

Said I have a good sense of smell. We all do, I think. It’s hard to find nowadays, she said. Not popular anymore. When did she start using it? In high school. Of course. Good luck finding it, I said. I’ll think of you when I do, she said.

Nope, Bullock’s hair doesn’t float enough

Which is just one of the several criticisms astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson makes in Twitter snippets about the new hit movie Gravity. I figure it was in her contract, so she could maintain her “star quality” beauty, even though she had cut it short to fit under the snoopy caps astronauts wear. On the other hand her wide, flabby butt is on display in the interior scenes and at the very end, so to speak. Tyson and I were both charmed that her tears float in micro-G. Out into your face, in fact, in 3D. And Tyson has other compliments.

Her hair was not my biggest criticism, after Mrs. Charm pushed me into going with her to see the flicker. My No. 1 problem (besides an intense dislike of sticky movie theater floors and farting in adjacent seats) was the phony orbital mechanics. The story has the human stars moving directly from the shattered shuttle to the ISS and Bullock by herself to the Chinese outpost. Couldn’t happen because the three craft would be in different orbits, at least scores of miles apart. Vertically apart, so to speak.

That’s a flaw Hollyweird would not be able to get away with if Tyson’s persistent lobbying for a doubling (at least) of NASA’s budget, and a solar-system-wide program of human exploration works out. I hope it does. Schoolkids would know, among other things, there are no straight-line journeys in the black because space is curved. But I’ve been hoping, unrequited, for more than perpetual low-orbit circles since 1980.

Overall, Gravity is impressive. Even great, in its way. Four stars. The space-and-earth scenes (compiled I expect from actual NASA, maybe even Russian, video) are astounding in 3D. The actors and the hardware lend perspective.

SPOILER ALERT: Mr. Boy, who saw it on his own, mocked Bullock’s lengthy bouts of hyperventilating. It was tiresome. I was pleased to see Clooney get it. I dislike his politics so much I almost refused to attend in the first place. So his “death” was a nice surprise.

I would have been more pleased if the director/producer had gone against the cliche (for once) and had the woman sacrifice herself for the man—if the beneficiary was anyone but Clooney. But Mrs. Charm said the audience would have never forgiven the man. She was right. Such is reality.

The President works for us

So says astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson, easily the most impressive space lobbyist since Carl Sagan, who was not in fact very interested in people-in-space. Tyson is, passionately.

He wants—among other things—to solve our economic and unemployment problems by doubling NASA’s budget. Lots of people would sneer (do sneer) at that, but he’s right about the broad economic stimulus of space exploration. And as impressive as SpaceX and other private space commerce is becoming, it’s not enough.

Space exploration is so much more economically powerful than handing out trillions of dollars to phony solar cell and electric car companies and other Democrat cronies. Or Republican ones, for that matter. Gingrich wanted a base on the moon. Romney sneered. We’re lucky he didn’t get elected, but the one we got is no better and in some ways worse. And I doubt he thinks he works for us.

Tyson notes in his talk at the link above, very accurately I think, that if the Chinese decided to build a military base on the moon, we would have a  moon base within nine months. No more 20-years-to-Mars nonsense. I hope they do it, so we can. In the meantime we can dream along with Tyson and hope Obozo listens to him, too, insofar as he listens to anyone. Someday.

Holy Bevo

Nobody but themselves expected the Longhorns to dominate Oklahoma like they did at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas today, 36 to 20.

“The Longhorns won convincingly because they out-physicaled the Sooners, both offensively and defensively. Texas’ offensive line played its best game of the season, as did the defense.”

If these guys show up every week for the rest of the season, they just might win the Big 12 again this year. Hook Em.

Join the Tea Party

One version of it, anyhow, The Tea Party dot Net whose ordinary tax-exempt status still is pending from the corrupt Democrat IRS. The kind Leftist groups such as People for the American Way already have, not to mention the Jihadi-lovin’ CAIR.

I have a couple of San Antonio friends who consider themselves Tea Partiers, though, for the most part, Tea Partiers are not card-carrying members of any of the thousands of such named groups. That would be a significant disadvantage for a third-party political movement except the Tea Party groups concentrate on reforming both major parties from within.

The Tea Party dot Net, claims more than 3 million members at the moment. I’m one of them, because I agree with the movement’s small-government aim, as do, among others,Texas Republican (and ObamaCare-fighting) Sen. Ted Cruz. It’s the best way to seek change since I’m too old to march and too busy to call or write letters to pols, even if I thought that would help, which I don’t.

The other best way is to vote to throw out incumbents, every chance you get, including Ted when his term is up. No more career pols like idiot Biden and slack-brained McCain.

UPDATE:  Especially because it now looks like Boehner is getting ready to sell out. As the TPN’s Jennifer Burke puts it: The Left is “saying, ‘RINO’s, we know that you have no spine. We know that you don’t stand on principle. We know that you enjoy your cushy little life here in DC with all of the perks and are complacent just to be in second place. Do as we say or else.”

Or else meaning take bigger hits in the polls than Obutthead is. (As if the polls were trustworthy to begin with.) Because when you’re like slack-brained McCain, the career pol who doesn’t work and doesn’t want to, the perks rule.

Hail Mary, hail yes

It was fun watching Longhorn John Harris pull down Case McCoy’s 44 yard Hail Mary in the closing seconds of Thursday’s first half at Iowa State. After that it was pretty much Case-as-usual, i.e. overthrowing his receiver in the end zone, etc. At least he didn’t fumble or throw an interception.

I often wonder why Texas is stuck with McCoy Jr. and concussion-prone David Ash, but then I remember that McCoy Sr. hasn’t found a starting job in the NFL since he busted his career at Cleveland. Not to mention bad boy Vince who attituded himself out of his first and last NFL starting job at Tennessee.

The extraordinary thing is all the current college stars or starting NFL quarterbacks Texas could have had but didn’t, including A&M wonder Johnny Manziel.

“The [Florida State Jameis] Winston debacle could stand on its own as a red flag that something is amiss in Texas’ recruiting process, but when you add in the lack of an offer to guys like Luck, Mallett, Griffin and Manziel, the pattern is clear.”

Unfortunately clear. It really is time for Brown to go, and after watching the never-very-good-at-passing Case throw 45 times at Iowa State (versus 29 runs) Brown should take play-caller Applewhite with him.

An hour or so after what is sure to be next Saturday’s nuclear destruction by Oklahoma would be an excellent time to send them on their way.

UPDATE:  Ash officially can forget about a possible Sooners collision. The Horns stood little chance with him playing but, probably none with Case substituting.

Dallas armors up, Austin shoots at traffic stop

Officer Friendly is getting more unfriendly every day.

The Dallas sheriff has acquired an MRAP (Drudge calls it a tank, but it isn’t), an armored SUV straight off the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan. They’ll use it for, uh, serving warrants:

“‘Having a tactical vehicle will not only provide warrants execution with the equipment to assist in performing their jobs but will provide an overall safety arch,’ Chief Deputy Marlin Suell wrote to commissioners.”

Meanwhile, Austin PD has thankfully fired a trigger-happy cop for shooting at a traffic stop back in May. Instead of waiting behind the wheel, the stoppee stupidly got out and approached the officer. But, come on, that deserves a warning shot? And where else might the bullet have gone?

Like I’ve said before, these days the safest way to approach Officer Friendly—if you absolutely have to—is with both your hands in the air. But in a traffic stop, stay in your car, stupid!

And it would be smart to put both hands on the top of the steering wheel where they can be seen. Officer Friendly is really touchy.

UPDATE:  Another example of police militarization and, once more, it’s in Texas. Although I sometimes wonder about Dallas County.