Blog Day 2005

Afromusing | Older Posts | Wednesday, August 31st, 2005

5 bloggers to recommend to you…

Eric Umansky - He writes todays papers for slate,
some observations that he makes on how american papers cover the news
that dont make it into TP are put on his blog. He has a very keen eye
for details (included or missed) and also has great online resources if
you are interested in really understanding stuff that is going on

Billmon-
Witty! and absolutely thorough. A wizard with humor and detail. His
series on the state world economy was definitely interesting if abit
complex - The chicken and the egg series(had to read some passages twice). He has a knack for history too. Brilliant.

Koranteng Toli - (via KenyaPundit)
Techy, literary, African, with a musical bent. He has other categories
that you can check out on his blog. Check out his post on strange bedfellows. Its abit long, It helps if you print it out…You probably wont put it down. Eye opening.

Timbuktu chronicles - (via Bankelele)Emeka
okafor (no, not the basketball player)covers the ideas and solutions
that will catapult Africa into a self reliant continent or let me put
it this way….the ideas that will continue the African renaissance.

Andrews Ghetto Blog. Its hilarious.

Piga Ndebe for BlogGodPapa , Mawazo na Mawaidha and also Nchi Yetu Daily.
(just kinda felt like making some noise.) Piga Ndebe for all KBW
bloggers too, the entertainment and thought you guys bring to the
blogosphere is amazing!

Nick Sagan’s Edenborn

Afromusing | Older Posts | Tuesday, August 30th, 2005

Picked up the book Edenborn by Nick Sagan, he is the son of Carl Sagan
and interplanetary artist Linda Salzman Sagan. Carl Sagan was the
writer of cosmos, Broca’s Brain,Contact (later adapted into a movie
starring Jodie foster), etc.
The book is not too bad. I felt like it
could have used more action, though perhaps the lack of it gave the
author a chance to really flesh out the characters. I have not read his
first book Idlewind, i think this book builds on it. There are a couple
of references to idlewind though not so essential to reading edenborn.
His style is definitely unique, what with a joke wrung out of Thomas
Edison’s quote “I have not failed, i’ve just found ten thousand ways
that wont work”.(the joke wont make sense if i pluck it out of the
story)
The character pandora is an intriguing tech savvy woman who
is in love with a ‘bad boy’. I liked her character the most, though i
found myself jotting down afew lines by the character haji who is a
wise sufi who says “enlightenment must come little by little otherwise
it would overwhelm”. Then there is penny who is coco in a dark but
hilarious kind of way, its like she was on a permanent scheming rant.
You
might need to be a bit patient for the most part with this book, the
pace quickens as it nears the end and you get the feeling that there is
another book in the horizon. I am leary of comparing it to Orson Scott
Card’s Ender novels, though if you like Ender, you might enjoy
this…Edenborn has a mystical quality to it and some very interesting
humour. (well at least to me..i find a reference to Operation love
machine kinda hilarious.)
For a quick layout of the plot from idlewind click here

**You have got to read bankelele’s nightmare if its one thing you do today.

which fosters friend would you adopt?

Afromusing | Older Posts | Saturday, August 27th, 2005

Fosters
Home for imaginary friends: The episode ‘Dinner is Swerved’ is preety
funny. Looking forward to when they release the shows on DVD. Speaking
of dvd’s the Family guy is worth it. Absolutely worth it.
Oh i think i will adopt coco. Why? Because i understand her!

Taarab on Afropop

Afromusing | Older Posts | Thursday, August 25th, 2005

Check the times on their site.

Have a great weekend… will be away for a couple of days ;E]

venezuela&robertson

Afromusing | Older Posts | Wednesday, August 24th, 2005

The rest of the story - nice coverage by soj.

Pat Robertson nutter of the year

Afromusing | Older Posts | Tuesday, August 23rd, 2005

Heard
about this early in the morning on npr, and was just flabbergasted.
Basically Pat Robertson, the guy from 700 club called for the
assasination of Hugo Chavez, president of Venezuela.
On NPR, they included some his earlier controversial (read shenzi) remarks. The one i laughed about was about feminism. ati
“The
feminist agenda is not about equal rights for women. It is about a
socialist, anti-family political movement that encourages women to
leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy
capitalism, and become lesbians. “
(Fundraising letter, 1992)
more quotes here.
The link above to Media matters has the video.

And check out jjray’s
odds and ends section, rotfl! (If you’ve been reading this blog since i
started you already know jjray and Irene and what a joy it is to have
them weigh in on issues be it law, kenya & US etc…I always check
their blog, hop over and see why.)

Rural electrification - solar

Afromusing | Solar | Saturday, August 20th, 2005

Q:
Is solar energy being considered by the government of Kenya as part of
the solution to the lack of electrity (particulary in rural areas) in
Kenya?
A: It does not appear so.

If you see indications to the contrary please let me know. (I looked around, maybe not hard enough?)
Check out the energy ministry website. They need to put more infomation online, especially regarding the energy policy and the Rural Electrification Programme.

As per this 1999 report on Kenya’s PV Market by Moses Agumba and Bernard Osawa of UNDP,
“PV
has not been considered for rural electrification, as it does not
qualify under the Least Cost Extension Programmes(LCEP). This is a
method used by the government to decide on which power generation
options to use.”

Dunno what the LCEP program is, was or if it is
currently still being used to determine power generation options.
Whatever initiatives to solve the energy problem will have to come from
the private sector, and wananchi as is most often the case.

**Price of solagen Big Kit Solar
system Ksh82,950/ US$1095.10(based on 75.75 as exchange rate); not
having to pay a monthly bill, i presume that feeling would be priceless.
Annoyance:Spam, i had to close the comments section to anon and blogless commenters.

Mango splitter

Afromusing | Older Posts | Saturday, August 20th, 2005

Via
the NY Times Magazine. It looks like a nifty gadget, havent tried it
yet. I know some of you like mangoes, especially the ones from coast,
with alittle chilli powder sprinkled on it and a spritz of lime.

The question of how to slice a mango was posed here...(Mshairi’s meme to MJY), twas intresting!

The Blues - Feel like going home

Afromusing | Older Posts | Monday, August 15th, 2005

I
have a lump in my throat and i will just confess right now that i
cried, in awe? i still dont know, but i cried. [Disclaimer: i cry in
99% of movies]. That is not the reason for this entry though. I
borrowed the film ‘Feel Like Going Home’ from the library and just
finished watching it awhile ago. I enjoy listening to blues, though i
would not consider myself an avid fan who knows much about it other
than listening to it on public radio or attending a concert or two.

The
film is about the origins and the history of the blues. From the juke
joints of the mississipi delta to the Niger River in Mali. Martin
Scorcese produced it, he does some narrating in several bits but the
main person who anchors this amazing film is Corey Harris. Its almost like Scorcese knew that the best person
through which this story should be explored is Harris, he stepped away
and let Harris go on this wonderful journey of discovery. Many things struck me in this film. Listening and watching Son House,
could make you emotional, yet impart strength to your spirit. Just
hearing him speak, his voice is the blues. The flute (cane)playing of Otha Turner was
beautiful, better yet, his words, actually the stories and words of all
the people corey harris spoke to were deep. Real deep.
In the days
of slavery in America, the [african]drum was banned, yet later the use
of snare drum in the mississipi featured, as corey harris put
it..interwoven polyrythms, which are very common in african music.
Harris poignantly observed that Africa was always just a heartbeat away.

If you listen to the radio show the world by PRI the tune for the geo quiz by Ali Farka Toure opens Corey Harris’s segment in Mali. He speaks with Salif Keita,
whose music is moving, though i cant understand a single word. I must
admit that this is the section i found just incredibly special.
You
know how when people come to visit in Africa and the elders sit on
chairs under a tree to talk? Corey Harris was talking with Toumani Diabate at
his compound, with Diabate telling him of his history,he hails from 71
generations of griots in mali. They also talked about how they felt
about slavery. Harris met and played with Habib Koite,
then with Ali Farka Toure, who apparently was forbidden by his family
to be an artist (because he was considered a nobleman). I tell you this
film is interesting. As Harris and Ali Farka Toure play a version of
John Lee Hooker’s song under a tree on an island off the niger river,
you can sense the stillness and camaraderie. Scorsese noted Harris’s
words. “To know yourself, you have to know the past”.
Two quotes from Ali Farka Toure, “The
culture is here, it is the heart of African tradition. We have all the
roots of the history, the legends, the biography and the science and
the African technology.”

“I will tell you this,
there are no black Americans. There are blacks in America, no black
americans exist. The blacks left with their culture and they kept it.
But the biography, the ethnicity, the legends they did lose. Still,
their music is African. Whether in the US or in Mali i think that there
are only cities and distances separating us, but our souls, our spirits
are the same[snip]. I feel sorry, “why?” because they are people who
should be united.”

one more quote from alan Lomax

When the whole world is bored with automated mass distributed video
music our descendants will despise us for throwing away the best of our
culture.”

Its a wonderful film. Wouldnt it be cool if PBS teamed up with KTN or Citizen/Royal Media to show films such as these?

Of Books, chance & curiosity

Afromusing | Older Posts | Friday, August 12th, 2005

I
have this weird rule, that if i read/hear/come across something that i
make a mental note of or become curious about, then i’d probably check
it out. If i hear the same thing a second time and it still evokes
something in my mind, well that’s when i think Yeah, i need to check
that out; then probably procrastinate it and keep going on with ‘life’
as usual…Now if i hear it a third time and more often than
not/especially in an entirely different context, then its finally
settled. I definitely have to check it out.
Bhutan:
Strike 1: A good article in the tech review August edition, check it out here. Its about the Bhutanese concept of GNH(Gross National Happiness) as a measure of well the country is doing as opposed to GDP (Gross Domestic Product).
Strike
2: (2 weeks later) On my way home, NPR radio, Paul Rosenzweig was
talking about how Bhutan tackles immigration from India by having a
guest worker program. Listen to it here.
Strike 3. Global voices highlighted sepia mutiny, and this picture.

Ok..that’s it then, perhaps i shall start here. then head back to sepia mutiny.

Sometimes,
i come across books randomly, other titles persist in the back of your
mind for months, even years…till one day you say..thats it! I am
getting the book today. One of those persistent books is Charles
Mackay’s Extraordinary popular delusions and the madness of crowds.
A snippet from the preface
“In
reading the history of nations, we find that, like individuals, they
have their whims and their peculiarities; their seasons of excitement
and recklessness, when they care not what they do. We find that whole
communities suddenly fix their minds upon one object, and go mad in its
pursuit; that millions of people become simultaneously impressed with
one delusion, and run after it, till their attention is caught by some
new folly more captivating than the first. We see one nation suddenly
seized, from its highest to its lowest members, with a fierce desire of
military glory; another as suddenly becoming crazed upon a religious
scruple; and neither of them recovering its senses until it has shed
rivers of blood and sowed a harvest of groans and tears, to be reaped
by its posterity.”

Song: Signs (2004) Album : Signs Artist: Bushman
Q:Have you ever felt that some books choose you?

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