Thursday, December 31, 2020
Sunday, December 27, 2020
New Rohingya refugee camp
These poor people. It looks like Bangladesh went out of its way to build something nice.
Sunday, December 20, 2020
Eating the Globe update
With the pandemic and general chaos, I have not been going to restaurants or cooking unusual meals. These are the countries I have covered so far.
The only local restaurant on my radar screen is The Damel, a Senegalese joint. Alas, the brick and mortar restaurant is closed on weekends so I tried to find the food truck last night, but was unsuccessful. Here is a great video on the man behind the business.
Friday, December 18, 2020
Thursday, December 17, 2020
From Russia With Love Movie Review
Second up, From Russia With Love (1963):
But like Dr No, From Russia is problematic. I have to keep telling myself that I have to watch it through the lens of a 1963 contemporary. The misogyny makes more than a cameo. The portrayal of the Roma people was gratuitous and insulting. And the awkward sapphic scene between Kleb and Romanova.
Of the supporting cast, the actor who played Ali Kerim Bey stole the show. Q made his first appearance, which was brief and flair-less. Donald Grant made a creepy yet ultimately forgettable villain.
Rate From Russia With Love:
— Tamerlane's Thoughts (@TamerlaneBlog) December 6, 2020
Tuesday, December 15, 2020
Saturday, December 12, 2020
My Daily Driver: @RRSEsquire's 2004 Chrysler 300M Special
At the time, I was driving an identically-optioned 2004 300M Special with 152,000 miles that I had bought in 2013 from a Club Member and friend. It was a great car, but it had started to rust in the rear quarter panels, a common rust point on the LH cars. Rather than have those fixed, it seemed like a good idea to start over with a rust free canvas, even if I would be the first owner who drove the car in the winter.
The LH cars get slander online from people who have never owned them. The reality is that they are very reliable cars on which you can easily fix most problems in your own driveway, assisted by the engine's longitudinal mounting and the great 300M Club community around them - including an old school car forum with Members still regularly sharing repair and maintenance knowledge and tips.
The biggest problem with ownership of these cars is that they're becoming the car everyone forgot about, including Chrysler's parts department. Many OEM parts are no longer available, which requires relying on aftermarket parts which can be questionable in quality and longevity when used in a daily driver. They're also becoming scarce in salvage yards around me.
The second is the day after I fixed the control arms and my friends helped me build out the stereo. That morning I headed into work in Boston with the stereo bumping and the car quietly whizzing along I-93 and I was reminded of why the 2nd generation LH cars are so great, despite being designed and released over 20 years ago.
Friday, December 11, 2020
Eating the Globe: Papua New Guinea
The coffee is pretty good. I drink mine black. This was bitter, but not too bitter.
Countries tried so far:
Africa: Algeria, Burundi, DR Congo, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Mauritius, Morocco, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Somalia, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Tunisia, Uganda, ZimbabweAsia: Afghanistan, Armenia, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Burma, Cambodia, China, East Timor, Georgia, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Japan, Jordan, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Lebanon, Malaysia, Maldives, Mongolia, Nepal, North Korea, Pakistan, Palestine, Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Syria, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, Yemen
Europe: Albania, Andorra, Austria, Belgium, Bosnia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czechia, Denmark,
North America: Belize, Canada, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, St Kitts & Nevis, Trinidad & Tobago, USA
South America: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela
Oceania: Australia, Fiji, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Tonga
Wednesday, December 09, 2020
My Daily Driver: @ekimap's Mercedes 300D
1. How did you come to the decision of buying this car?
Tuesday, December 08, 2020
Dr No Movie Review
Welcome to 007 Movie Reviews! My buddy Dave and I are both 007 fans and we decided to watch all the films chronologically. We will separately write reviews of each movie, simultaneously exchange the reviews with each other, and respond to the other person’s review. Finally, we are going to give each movie an A through F grade.
First up, the first Bond film. Dr No (1962):
Dave’s review:
Grading the inaugural edition of James Bond is always tough, as Sean Connery is just settling into his role and figuring out who the character is. What helps is a stellar cast of memorable characters, including the strong willed Honey Ryder, one of the best Bond girls of all time, and the nefarious Dr. No, who you don't see for the first time until near the climax of the film. What's great about Dr. No is that Bond is ruthless, shooting an unarmed man and proving that he's willing to do anything for the job. The film, however, feels old and moves slowly. 1962 is a long time ago! A few more action sequences, or longer ones, would have livened things up considerably.
TT’s review:
Growing up in the 1980s, Roger Moore was my Bond. I always considered Connery movies as old fashioned and stale. Today, as a middle aged man living in a pandemic, and having just watched The Hunt for Red October for the first time as a tribute to Sir Sean’s life, I have newfound respect for the actor and the early Bond films.
The movie is old. 58 years old. I now see it as a bridge between pre-war and modern movies. It was made in the 1960s, yet it still had the stereotypical bug-eyed scared Black man, white actors playing Asian characters, and a lot of men wearing hats. At the same time, it was groundbreaking and forward looking in that it was an action thriller that had car chases and high tech gadgets. Dr No had an outsized influence on hundreds of films, from The Bourne Identity to Austin Powers.
My grade is as much based on the importance of the film in cinematic history as its actual merits.
I want to add that we praised Daniel Craig’s Bond because he showed emotions and exhibited pain. But in the very first Bond film, Connery was scared out of his gourd by a tarantula and had sweaty palms when he was about to meet Dr No. Connery was vulnerable too!
Dave’s response:
TT’s response:
I agree with Dave that Dr No is a bit crude and underdeveloped. But it was 1962!
TT’s grade: A-
Dave’s grade: B
Rate Dr No:
— Tamerlane's Thoughts (@TamerlaneBlog) December 5, 2020
Saturday, December 05, 2020
Romain Grosjean's tale of survival
Chilling.
𝐑𝐨𝐦𝐚𝐢𝐧 𝐆𝐫𝐨𝐬𝐣𝐞𝐚𝐧: 𝐈𝐧 𝐡𝐢𝐬 𝐨𝐰𝐧 𝐰𝐨𝐫𝐝𝐬@RGrosjean gives a clear and moving description of his accident, and how he managed to escape.#SkyF1 | #F1 | #SakhirGP 🇧🇭 pic.twitter.com/7yINOsmIOf
— Sky Sports F1 (@SkySportsF1) December 4, 2020
Tuesday, December 01, 2020
My Daily Driver: @_baldtires's Chevy Cobalt SS
1. How did you come to the decision of buying this car?
You know, I was tired of hearing about how bad American cars were. A lot of people I know would never even consider buying one, and they justify this by citing the poor build quality that they say defines every aspect of domestic cars. I had heard this so many times I started to question whether it was actually true.
For $4700, which is what I paid for this car, the Japanese and German options were definitely present. But I’ve driven those cars, I know what they’re like, and they are, in my opinion, pretty played out. Everybody buys Civic Sis, I already have an E46 3 Series, and every other imported enthusiast car just seemed so… common. They’re obvious choices, the Big Mac is the same everywhere, I didn’t want a Big Mac.
But outside of not wanting to buy something everybody else buys, the decision was actually pretty simple. The Cobalt SS sedan offers 260 horsepower from a strong 2.0-liter engine with a forged crankshaft, forged rods, and oil squirters under the pistons. There’s also a front limited-slip differential, a ton of space inside thanks to its goofy roofline and folding rear seats, and it gets 30+ MPG on the highway.
The front brakes are massive units made by Brembo—you can’t fit anything smaller than a 17-inch wheel on this car—and it has no-lift-shift and launch control. It’s also cheap to fix, reliable, and inexpensive to insure.
It’s faster than the Honda S2000, Mitsubishi Lancer Evo, and BMW 135i around Virginia International Raceway. Here’s the full results of Car and Driver’s 2008 Lightning Lap testing, if you’re interested in seeing other, more expensive cars that the Cobalt SS is faster than.
For $22k brand new, it held the FWD lap record at the Nurburgring in 2007.
My Cobalt was perhaps not abused by its previous owners, but it wasn’t actively cared for. I’ve had to replace things that previous owners clearly didn’t want to, and the alignment was so jacked up when I got the car that the steering wheel was cocked over to the left between 10 and 15 degrees.
The hand brake, whose lever is the cheapest I have ever encountered, also somehow managed to feel even cheaper due to one cable just not being hooked up. As it turns out, one of the cables rusted, was stuck, and needed to be replaced. The previous owner solved this issue by simply disconnecting that side. Thanks professor!
One of the front calipers—made by Brembo—also had a ruined bore. I replaced that as well, which wasn’t cheap.
The car also had a litany of small issues that are typical of a vehicle that hasn’t been cared for, but it’s things you get over pretty quickly, or are fixed easily. The nice thing about the Cobalt is that it’s very easy to work on, and all of the parts—besides the things exclusive to the SS trim—are very inexpensive. They made more than a million Cobalts, after all.
The interior in the SS is also slightly nicer than the one found in a base Cobalt, primarily because of the nice SS-specific seats. Other features I like on the inside are the USB port on the dash to charge my phone, and the standard AUX input, both things I have to do without on my older E46. The car’s sound system is also surprisingly good, which I did not expect.
I wouldn’t buy a regular Chevy Cobalt, but the SS delivers a fond memory nearly every time I drive it. I’ll tell you my fondest memory in a moment, let me name a few other good moments first.
Even in its SS trim, the Cobalt sedan is a boring-looking car that, after all, says “Cobalt” on the back. People also must assume the SS trim—as I previously did—is just an appearance package with different transmission tuning, or something.
One fond memory I have, and I’ve only had the car for a few months, is right after I installed new MAP sensors and a tune. General Motors offered a similar tune that could be installed at dealers, but the aftermarket one I got from ZZP was a little more aggressive. $400 later, and my Cobalt was faster than my E46 M3. The tune claims 280whp and 320 ft/lbs (which I take with a grain of salt) but that first hole-shot with my friend—who has a 350whp VW golf—was a little shocking. The car was fast before, but now it was the sort of fast where you forget where you are and what you’re doing. He looked at me with the same look a lot of other people give me, which is a mix of disbelief, shortly followed by laughter.
Other people have given me that same look, one in a new WRX, another in a Focus ST, and other drivers in cars that people perhaps don’t think are fast, but must be faster than a Chevy Cobalt.
My fondest memory, perhaps because it’s the most recent, is bus-gapping the guy in a BRZ with a “SEND NUDES” rear wing on it. In the BRZ, he must’ve seen it coming, but I’m not sure if he did. He was with a few of his friends in other, similarly equipped cars, and he seemed pretty embarrassed. He exited off I95 South, companions in tow, a short time later.
I’m not sure what there isn’t to love about cars besides the cost—environmental and financial. They’re a mobile environment that stimulates nearly every sense. The right car looks great, sounds great, feels great, and even smells great. Different cars obviously balance these senses differently, but you can get in a car anytime you want and experience sensory overload just by turning a steering wheel and pressing your foot into a pedal. In the right car, every drive is an opportunity to at least put a smile on your face, and cars that actively encourage you to smile, that want you to be happy, can be had for as little as $4,700. Ask me how I know.