Archive for February, 2008

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Filing Update – 5 p.m.

February 29, 2008

Republican County Commissioner Linda Shook filed to challenge state Rep. Jimmy Love today.

And that concludes my blogging about candidates filing. I’ve got a lot more planned for the election cycle, so I’m not done by any means, but more of what’s coming up will be in the newspaper and not on my blog.

In any case, I hope you’ll keep following what’s going on, as local politics is probably the most important kind.

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Filing Update – 5 p.m.

February 28, 2008

Matt Akinosho filed to run for the Lee County Board of Education today.

The filing period closes at noon tomorrow. Then we’ll knowour full slate of candidates for 2008.

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Filing Update – 5 p.m.

February 27, 2008

Kimberly Lilley has filed for the Lee County Board of Education.

I don’t know Kimberly but I’m hoping to have a little information about her for tomorrow’s Herald.

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Neil Innes

February 27, 2008

I thought today that I’d share the genius of Neil Innes.

Innes is a British musician/comedian who ran with the Monty Python crowd back in the day. A lot of his humor is on the same level as Python (and quite a bit of it features Python alum Eric Idle) and he was involved with the vastly underrated Rutland Weekend Television, the unheralded successor to Monty Python’s Flying Circus.

Anyway, most of these videos focus on Innes’ music stylings (he is/was a master of the parody-tribute) although I’m including one favorite of mine that’s music-free.

“Protest Song”
Innes’ spoof of Bob Dylan/Phil Ochs/etc. “I’ve suffered for my music, and now it’s your turn.” The harmonica parts get me every single time.

“Godfrey Daniel”
Elton John spoof. The most visually hilarious of the Innes videos I could find, but I also laugh pretty hard at the line “I believe in believin’.”

“Gibberish:”
Not a music video and doesn’t actually feature Innes. Henry Woolf is in his place, although Innes and Eric Idle originally wrote and performed this on one of his albums. That version is better but this is still hilarious. A great look at how to speak like a newsman without saying anything.

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Filing Update – 11:50 a.m.

February 27, 2008

Nobody has filed so far today to run for office in Lee County, but I’ve received a press release from Dan Mansell, the Johnston County businessman, announcing that he’ll make a second consecutive run against U.S. Rep. Bob Etheridge (D-Lillington) for Congress.

More on this story in tomorrow’s Herald.

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Filing Update – 5 p.m.

February 26, 2008

Bob Brown, the Democratic chairman of the Lee County Board of Commissioners, filed to seek a second term today.

I’ll have a brief story on this as well as filings from Chatham, Harnett and Moore counties in tomorrow’s Herald.

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Book review: Dying Inside

February 26, 2008

Robert Silverberg’s Dying Inside has the distinction of being maybe the most depressing novel I’ve ever read. That’s not to say it was bad at all: I actually loved the book and I figure I’ll probably read it again later, but it’s not happy stuff, at least not most of the way through.

The 1972 novel that tells the story of David Selig, a man gifted with a sort of receive-only telepathy whose godlike power — instead of making him confident and willing to do great things for the benefit of others — actually debilitates him, wracks him with guilt at being able to see the inner-most secrets of anyone he comes in contact with, and makes him almost incapable of enjoying any kind of meaningful contact with others since, well, he can see all the bad thoughts inside people as well as the good. As the story begins, Selig’s power is fading, and he knows it, hence the name of the novel.

I found out about the novel after reading 1969’s The Man in the Maze, which Silverberg also wrote and I reviewed here. It was actually the wikipedia entry for The Man in the Maze which led me to Dying Inside, as the entry notes that both novels use “psychic powers as an allegory for human interaction.”

Having read both books, I think that’s an interesting comparison to make. In The Man in the Maze Robert Muller is an astronaut/interplanetary diplomat who after making the first contact between humans and extraterrestrials becomes imbued with a sort of reverse telepathy that makes anyone who comes into close contact with him feel waves of nausea, apprehension, anxiety, and sickness come washing out of him. It’s something he can’t help, so he goes into exile. Dying Inside’s Selig, conversely, can read the minds of others, and in most cases he doesn’t like what he sees, causing him to go into his own sort of exile, although it’s more of a metaphorical exile than in the other book.

This may all sound too depressing for most, but both novels end on high notes. In the foreward to Dying Inside, some noted science fiction scholar wrote (I’m paraphrasing here since I don’t have the book in front of me) that the story is less about the death pangs of a man with a gift and more about the birth pangs of just a man, and that’s pretty dead-on.

The most important part of the story to me was that Selig’s great power, which he’d had from birth, did more to alienate him from his fellow man than any good. As it dies, he has to learn to live without it, and become normal. This is a theme that’s repeated throughout the book in smaller, episodic microcosms. At its essence, I found the book to be about self-involvement and what it can do to a person. Much like The Man in the Maze, there’s hope for a selfish character toward the end, but you’re also not spoon-fed a happy ending. You have to think for yourself.

Silverberg made his bread and butter writing shlocky science fiction (stuff with titles like Invaders from Earth and Lost Race of Mars) throughout the 1950s and early 60s before moving on to stuff that’s rightfully viewed as blurring the line between genre fiction (sci-fi, in Silverberg’s case) and literature. Apparently, Dying Inside is hailed as Silverberg’s masterwork (I’d never heard of the guy before last year, but after enjoying two of his novels in less than five months, I’ll say I’m becoming a fan), and I’ve found it to be challenging and rewarding if only for the fact that it’s almost not even science fiction: It takes place in 1976 New York City, and deals almost exclusively in internal dialogue. There are no spaceships, time travel, or aliens.

But that’s not what science fiction is about. Science fiction, as a guy a lot smarter than I am once noted, is “the literature of ideas.” Specifically, ideas that might be possible in the future or ideas that flout the known laws of nature (a category into which ESP definitely falls), and how humanity might benefit or suffer from their application.

So Dying Inside is most certainly a look at how humanity might suffer from the ability for us to peer into each other’s souls. While Silverberg postulates that people’s insides (and outsides, for that matter) have their share of negatives, the idea seems to be that we should focus on what’s positive about the people we’re around and how fellowship and understanding might do the world a lot more good than knowing everything about each other’s insides would.

Hey, maybe that book wasn’t so depressing.

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Filing Update – 1 p.m.

February 26, 2008

Nobody has filed to run for office today. I’ll update again around 5 p.m.

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Filing Update – 5 p.m.

February 25, 2008

Monday was quiet, nobody filed. I could be wrong, but I don’t know how much action I think we’ll see between now and Friday noon.

Anyone have any thoughts on whether we’re looking at our full slate of candidates or if someone else is going to file?

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Filing Update – 3:50 p.m.

February 25, 2008

Nobody today, but I thought I should address something I wrote over the weekend.

My story in Sunday’s paper indicated that the filing period closes at 5 p.m. on Friday. That’s incorrect. The filing period closes at noon on Friday, so I wanted to correct that error as quickly as possible.

While I think anyone who is serious about running for office is going to know this already, I’d hate for somebody who read my story to show up to the Board of Elections office at 3 p.m. on Friday only to find that they can’t run.

It’s noon Friday.

I’ll update this again about 5 p.m. whether anyone files or not.