CNN: Off the deep end

Where goes Bill Hemmer?

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I think the executives at CNN have totally gone around the bend. Because of the need to watch expenses, I don’t get CNN on cable anymore but I understand morning anchor Bill Hemmer is being replaced by Miles O’Brien in joining the show’s co-host Soledad O’Brien (no relation). O’Brien and O’Brien. Sounds like the setup for an Irish joke. The official explanation was CNN wanted to make the show “newsier.” Okay. I like Miles O’Brien. He is one of the funnier TV news guys and a whiz at explaining technological stories. It took me awhile to warm up to Soledad, but I thought she was doing just great with Hemmer and Jack Cafferty, the show’s resident curmudgeon.

I’m sure CNN bigwigs think they know what is best for whipping the Fox Network, which continues to bedevil them and me for one. But I am not sure they are right. CNN misuses good news talent. Hemmer is one of the best network TV anchors and reporters going these days. I am hoping CNN will realize one day their decision comes back and bites them in the ass. Hopefully, it will be too late and Bill Hemmer will have a good gig where he gets the proper respect he deserves.

What's your sign?

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Signs are pretty useful. Sometimes they convey the obvious and sometimes the strange, other times they warn of danger or ask you buy someone’s product. I often think of signs in terms of art.

My dad would be 90 years old tomorrow had he not been dead for the last 21 years. Pop was a sign painter whose work made me come to appreciate signs as an art form. I think of how he used to cut patterns of letters and use a bag of chalk to leave an outline on a sign board onto which he would paint. And holy cow! Out came art.

I was cursed with not being able to draw a straight line, nor could I ever color inside those lines. I always admired my dad for being able to turn out letters so perfectly crafted. No matter how much booze he had the day before, he could still paint with precision and with a steady hand. It was amazing. But he was quite an amazing fellow in my eyes.

Are there too many signs? Yes. But are there too many works of art? I guess that would be in the mind of the beholder. Are all signs works of art? Hell no. Did I forget what point I was going to make? Apparently. Oh well, I’m sure it will come to me at 2 a.m. along with all the other brain clutter. Meanwhile, follow the signs to wherever it is you want to go. And have a hell of a good trip going there!

To think or not to think. That is the question.

Probing the vast unknown of the Internet out of painful boredom I happened across a site called Rate My Professor.Com that provoked some memories of my own academic days.

For those of you who have not see the site, it allows college students to rate their professors. You thought it was going to be about something else I bet. Like how to build a thermonuclear bomb in miniature.

No, for better or worse, it does what it says. I say for better or worse because I feel evaluation largely comes down to one of two criteria: You either like someone or something, or you don’t. I would only count on people I know — whose likes and dislikes and inclinations are familiar — to give me a reasonable critique of something or other. Even these people I know are going to largely base their findings on whether they like it or whether it makes them want to sit quietly in the corner in a semi-fetal position and gently rock themselves.

What was amazing was the take of these students on some of the same professors I had at Stephen F. Austin State University (Steve for short. Mascot: Lumberjack. So we’re okay.) Granted, there were only a few of the same professors who taught me listed on this Web site since I graduated 21 years ago. If anything these professors appeared to have maintained consistent approaches to teaching and had not undergone any radical personality change since I last left them.

But these ratings are still highly subjective. I look back at my own favorite professor as an example of how some like ya and some hate ya. I had Dr. Richard C. C. Kim during my first semester in college for an introduction to political science course. Later, he taught an advanced poly sci course called “Eastern Political Thought” that I also took.

Dr. Kim had written his own little book of musings called “Kimbrations,” which was required for the course. Between this book and his own story-telling, you would find out little personal information about the man. But I felt he was superb in making one see the world in more than black or white. That was problematic for some students. I actually heard some students remark that Kim was a communist. I don’t know if he was or not. He never once took a dogma for a daily walk that I could see. I suspect many of these students, suburban kids who came to the country party school, only knew what their daddies and mommas told them.

Kim was also very funny. I remember a multiple guess test in the intro course he gave that asked why many Americans were afraid of communism. I don’t remember the correct answer, but he always gave one answer that was so outrageous that even most morons would not select it. It was the throw-away answer that struck me so hard. It said: “Pavlov was a communist. He taught his dog to eat at the sound of a bell and it ate the Avon lady.”

He also told this long, strange story about Asians who became chicken sexers. In case you don’t know what that is, it is someone who determines the sex of baby chicks. Apparently, a lot of Asians got into this occupation and it was probably the sole reason for seeing most Asians in Nacogdoches, Texas, in the late 1960s or ’70s when Kim arrived at Steve U. He said local merchants would ask him if he was a chicken sexer. Kim told us he looked at the store people and indignantly asked them what they meant, as if he was being accused of molesting chickens. He also told the story with that little smile and twinkle in his eye that gave you no indication whether this guy was telling the truth or if this was bullshit. I loved it!

The Eastern political theory class was kind of disjointed. He had tried getting us to link Asian political behavior with art and it didn’t always translate, at least for me. I did write a paper on Asian poetry and political persuasion that made a little bit of sense. It didn’t make the connection with Japanese haiku very well. But it did okay on how Mao Tse-tung (or Zedong, or whatever he’s being called these days)used poetry to advance his communist philosophy.

Whether or not the Young Republicans liked Kim or not, I guess what I most appreciate about him is he made me think about weighty matters in more than one way. That is what college is supposed to do. That and provide a platform for partying your ass off.

Will she or won't she?

U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison with my former state Sen. Kip Averitt, R-McGregor.

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The Dallas Morning News reports that U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison won’t be running in the 2006 Republican primary for Texas governor, although she is yet to officially announce that she is running for re-election to the Senate. Bummer dude. I had looked forward to a three-way Jesus-Tap-Dancing-Christ slugfest between Kay and Gov. Rick Vunderfulhair Perry along with Carole Strayhorn, if she announces in the morning. What fun is this? If this all pans out, I guess we’ll just have to count on a Democratic primary for entertainment. And they’ve not been too entertaining lately, let me tell you.

Come on Kay, please, please, please, will you run for governor? I won’t vote for you (at least in the primary election) but we’ll always have your using my bathroom at the newspaper in Corrigan.

One kooky grandma

How many names will Carole Keeton McClellan Rylander Strayhorn carry to the polls in March 2006?

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The 2006 governor’s race in Texas is expected to get under way tomorrow with an Austin fiesta where State Comptroller Carole Keeton McClellan Rylander Strayhorn (all one person) is expected to announce for the Republican primary in March.

Strayhorn was McClellan when she was elected as Austin mayor (her son Scott is White House press secretary and another son runs Medicare). She was Rylander when elected as the first female on the Texas Railroad Commission. This go around she’s a Strayhorn. Who knows, if she actually gets elected governor she may change her name again. Maybe she will call herself George Bush. Or Ronald Reagan.

Carole bills herself as “one tough grandma.” She is pretty feisty and has taken on Gov. Goodhair Rick Perry on a number of issues. I would bet Perry would use the term “pain in the ass” to describe Carole. She is also kind of goofy. Nothing specific I can point to, but I remember her calling me up one time when she was on the Railroad Commission and she just came across as kind of dingy. That’s not not to say she is a bad person.

My vague characterizations notwithstanding, the Republican race for governor could provide entertainment the likes we have not seen since the Great Texas Fry-Off in 1990. I refer to the three-way race for the Democratic nomination between Former governors Ann Richards and Mark White, and former Texas attorney general Jim Mattox. Each tried to one-up each other on who was toughest on crime. I think I remember “Saturday Night Live” doing a skit on the race, the candidates each saying they fried more death row prisoners than the other.

Not only do Goodhair and Carole seem to hate each other but the buzz continues that U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison may enter the race. This could get really good! I wouldn’t mind seeing a one-on-one throwdown between Carole and Kay. I think Carole may have a weight advantage over former University of Texas cheerleader and TV reporter Kay. I truly believe Carole could also whip Rick Perry’s ass. And if it was a battle of wits, both Strayhorn and Hutchison would face a governor who showed up for battle unarmed.

So I look forward to hearing if Carole makes it official tomorrow at her shindig. I hear she’s giving away free hot dogs, but I don’t think I would drive to Austin from Beaumont just for free hot dogs. Maybe if she was going three rounds with Kay or one round with Gov. Hair I would go.

Nonetheless, let the festivities begin. Release the hounds!