Don't visit your Congressman
'a certain jollity of mind pickled in the scorn of fortune'
Posted by
Unknown
at
6:42 AM
0
comments
Labels: brief nonfiction, Congress, D.C., elections, politics, travel, Washington
Don't miss the Brews-a-Palooza at House of Blues, North Myrtle Beach, S.C.
It's a beer fest running 5-11:30 p.m. Saturday, July 21, with a free buffet from 5-6 p.m.
Admission is $5, which includes a sampling glass for any of the 50-plus beers that will be available. Individual samples will vary in price. Buy tickets at $1 each to purchase samples.
Posted by
Unknown
at
1:29 PM
10
comments
Labels: #beermancolumn, #MYR, #MYReats, beer fest, beer festival, Brews-a-Palooza, House of Blues, North Myrtle Beach, tourism, travel
As Christmas approaches, I think we should note that Jesus has been appearing in a new TV show produced by J.J. Abrams.
“Person of Interest,” which appears at 9 p.m. Thursdays on CBS, stars Jim Caviezel, perhaps best known for playing The Savior in “The Passion of the Christ,” a film which had a pretty good reputation until director Mel Gibson became internationally known as a drunk-driving anti-Semite and baby-momma batterer.
Jesus, or Caviezel, plays Reese, who – for the record – only had an oversized first-century beard during part of the premiere episode.
In “Person of Interest,” Jesus isn’t always watching over you, but his employer certainly is. Jesus’s boss easily taps into massive networks of surveillance cameras and cell phone transmissions – for good purposes – in a way that ought to scare us all.
The employer, played by Michael Emerson, is Finch, the architect of a post-9/11 database that draws information from close-circuit television cameras and phone calls. Based on that information, the database predicts who might be a potential terrorist threat. Development of the database was funded by the U.S. government.
Although the machine was designed to predict terrorism, it also finds out about non-terrorists who might be running into trouble in the near future. The U.S. government didn’t want to deal with the people who aren’t threats to national security, so Finch left himself a backdoor into the system to find out who else might need help.
As a 9/11 survivor who apparently was assumed dead and now walks with a limp, Finch can’t chase the bad guys and protect the good guys. So Finch picked Reese – former special military agent who can take on gangs singlehandedly – to swing fists and fire bullets into non-lethal body parts while protecting innocent people in trouble. Jesus can really kick ass, and that’s the fun part of the show.
When Finch’s machine alerts him to a new person of interest, he immediately gets on his computer and accesses all kinds of personal information, files, records, and even photos. (Note to self: change privacy settings on Facebook.)
Watching the first few episodes of “Person of Interest,” I absorbed Finch’s access and quickly took it for granted. After all, Finch and ex-Jesus are good guys. As created characters, their work is ethical and intended for righteous ends. Finch has the access to the surveillance database, so why not use it?
Of course, the U.S. expanded its surveillance of its own citizens following 9/11, and that made some Americans uncomfortable. But there I am, each Thursday evening, watching someone watch surveillance feeds, watching someone spy on Americans – for a good cause. It’s a timely issue, like the end of “The Dark Knight,” when Batman hacks the cellphone networks to find the bad guys.
Many of us probably assume that the U.S. government has pulled back from its surveillance after the death of Osama bin Laden – which makes about as much sense as Lindsay Lohan telling Playboy she has learned from her mistakes while arguably making the mistake of appearing nude on 10 pages of the magazine.
At least Lohan knew she was being photographed – well, I guess she did; we’ll never know for sure. I haven’t always been sure when I was being photographed, like the time Lohan’s fellow “Mean Girls” actress Rachel McAdams jumped my bones in the elevator of The Martinique resort hotel in Myrtle Beach. I was like, “Wait! Stop! Let’s not embarrass ourselves! There might be a hidden camera in here!” Just go with it. I had to explain the lipstick smudge to my wife somehow.
I also didn’t know when I was being photographed or video-taped during four trips to London during the past two years. Closed-circuit cameras were everywhere – not just in train stations and subways, not just on buses. In England, home country to George Orwell, author of 1984, everyone accepts that constant surveillance is a necessity in violent times.
I’m not sure if the London cameras actually deter people from stealing or vandalizing – I mean, when there’s not already a community-organized riot and arson session in progress – but there were several times when I thought twice before scratching my ass.
Who would see me scratch my ass? Pick my nose? Quickly adjust my uncomfortably situated boxers?
Would the watcher think less of me? Laugh at me? Notice that my quick, private moves were especially American in form? Or worse yet, would think they were French in form?
Maybe that’s why I will continue to watch “Person of Interest.” Maybe I want to know what I and my microbrew physique look like on close-circuit camera.
Plus, I can’t stop watching Jesus kick ass and his boss navigate high-tech surveillance networks.
So maybe Lohan has the right idea. If you can’t have privacy, you might as well make a few bucks exposing your privates.
-Colin Foote Burch
(This column originally appeared in WeeklySurge.com and is re-posted here in July 2014.)
Posted by
Unknown
at
5:14 AM
0
comments
Labels: current affairs, England, Jesus, Person of Interest, pop culture, spying, surveillance, travel, TV
Wantsum Hengist, brewed in Canterbury, is one of the best beers I've tried over here.
Updated Jan. 5.
Hi folks -- I'm back in London. I exited a bus the other day in front of The Hop Exchange in the Southwark area. The Hop Exchange was supposed to be used for exactly what it says -- the exchange of hops -- but oddly enough, it never was.
Anyway, a few doors away I passed The Wheatsheaf pub. On the sidewalk in front of the store was a sandwich-board type of sign screaming to the world that Anchor Steam beer, made in San Francisco, was available inside.
Tomorrow, as in Friday, I'll go to Hay-on-Wye, a tiny Welsh town on the British border.
Kristi and I are staying at a small hotel known for its bar and ales.
Stay tuned!
I drank Young's London Gold in a pub behind Hard Rock Cafe London.
It was a hand-pumped cask ale, and had just a tiny hint of that bready flavor I notice in some beers, like Heineken -- but not strong.
Mostly, Young's London Gold was a lighter, yummy, summer-friendly beer.
Have you tried it? What did you think?
Today, between Henry IV Part One, and, incidentally, Henry IV Part Two, at The Globe Theatre, Kristi and I went to Founders Arms Riverside Pub.
I ordered a hand-pulled Wells Bombardier English Bitter.
Hand-pulled beers are not powered by carbon dioxide. Founders had those taps, too, but apparently the hand-pulled, or pumped, beers are unique to the U.K.
The guy pulled my beer, slowly filling the pint glass. He pulled the handle twice, and when the glass filled, with a bit of head on top, he set it aside and got Kristi's Strongbow cider from the regular taps.
Then he returned to my pint, and pulled the handle again, making sure the glass was filled.
That was awesome -- genuine respect and care for beer, even in a busy pub and restaurant.
The lamb kabobs were great, too.
Posted by
Unknown
at
6:06 PM
0
comments
Labels: beer, Founders, London, travel, Wells Bombardier
We've placed an online order with the grocery chain Tesco -- and guess what they will deliver to our place here in London?
Well, boring food, of course, but also 500-milliliter bottles of Fuller's ESB -- only one of the best beers, ever, and the original ESB (extra special bitter).
Meanwhile, my Pabst Blue Ribbon cover story for the Weekly Surge is now available online. See what Scott Smallin did to me with his camera! And PBR is not just a big cultural story right now -- it's also one of the biggest business stories of the year: click here.
Posted by
Unknown
at
7:11 PM
0
comments
Labels: beer, business, enterprise, Fuller's ESB, London, Pabst Blue Ribbon, travel
As in January, so in July: Stella Artois ads everywhere.
The ads in the tube stations declare Stella is made with only four ingredients: malt, hops, maize, and water.
Maize = corn.
Should we thank them for leaving out the rice?
Posted by
Unknown
at
11:17 AM
0
comments
Labels: beer, Beerman, London, travel, Weekly Surge
This is cute:
BBC News this morning calls it the "U.S. Oil Spill."
Not the "BP Oil Spill."
The "U.S. Oil Spill."
Posted by
Unknown
at
3:41 AM
0
comments
Labels: Beerman, BP, London, media, oil spill, travel, Weekly Surge
I never see 12-ounce cans on the beer shelves in the grocery stores here.
I haven't studied each can available, but they all appear to be 16-ounce or 24-ounce cans.
Yesterday morning, when we arrived at our place in Lambeth, my in-laws, Kristi and I celebrated by splitting a can of Strongbow cider.
Posted by
Unknown
at
3:26 AM
0
comments
Labels: beer, Beerman, columnist, London, Myrtle Beach, travel, Weekly Surge
Here are some worthwhile brews I've sampled while here in London. I'm heading back tomorrow, but if you travel to the U.K., or if you can find any of these in the States, they are very worthwhile:
Erdinger: A German wheat beer that has become a new favorite.
Budweiser Budvar: From the Czech Republic, this is NOT the Anheuser-Busch Bud. In fact, it pre-dates the Anheuser-Busch dominance of the beer market.
Britannia Ale: Fantastic balance, with hopping that leans toward a proper India Pale Ale.
Sambrook's Wandle: Enjoyable, highly drinkable.
Timothy Taylor's Landlord: Good balance, highly drinkable, very light, watery mouth-feel considering the level of character it delivers.