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Coconut Water Cosmo: For a Headstart to the Weekend

P739

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Ice Age Continental Drift, 2012

For lovers of the Ice Age franchise, every new one that comes out can do no wrong, that’s all there is to it.  Because if you loved Scrat, the rodent, then, you’ll love him now just as much, right?  Well, no arguments there, except for the one inevitable one about whether this was any better or bigger than previous ones.  This was certainly bigger in terms of the sheer number of characters, but as to whether it was better than the others is highly questionable.

And the characters — with the heroic and necessary exception of Scrat, are warmed-over hash. Manny (Ray Romao) and Ellie (Queen Latifah) must deal with the adolescence of their daughter, Peaches (Keke Palmer), who must learn a lesson about family, friendship and being yourself. Diego, the saber-toothed tiger (Denis Leary) falls into a love-hate romance with a feisty female named Shira (Jennifer Lopez), and Manny must rescue his family from disaster and fight off bad guys.

There’s not too much novelty in the plot, but perhaps that was never the point. Granny is outstanding as projected by Wanda Sykes in providing genuine comic relief from the at-times forced jollity.  All in all, its a busy set with too many talented actors lending their voices and personalities to this pre-historic drama.

Ice-age-4-poster_05

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The Endless Summer: Time to Take Notice, Yet?

Mark Bittman

Mark Bittman on food and all things related.

Here’s what American exceptionalism means now: on a per-capita basis, we either lead or come close to leading the world in consumption of resources, production of pollutants and a profound unwillingness to do anything about it. We may look back upon this year as the one in which climate change began to wreak serious havoc, yet we hear almost no conversation about changing policy or behavior. President Obama has done nicely in raising fuel averages for automobiles, but he came into office promising much more, and Mitt Romney promises even less. (There was a time he supported cap and trade.)

It has been well over 100 years since the phenomenon called the greenhouse effect was identified, 24 years since the steamy summer of ’88, when many of us first took notice, and, incredibly, 15 years since the Kyoto Protocol. That agreement stipulated that signatories would annually reduce their emissions of greenhouse gases and was ratified (and even acted upon) by almost every country in the world, including every industrialized nation but one. That would be the United States. Now that’s exceptionalism. (Bill Clinton signed Kyoto; George W. Bush, despite an election pledge, repudiated it.)

The climate has changed, and the only remaining questions may well be: a) how bad will things get, and b) how long will it be before we wake up to it. The only sane people who don’t see this as a problem are those whose profitability depends on the status quo, people of money and power like Romney (“we don’t know what’s causing climate change”), most of his party, and Rex Tillerson, the Exxon chairman, who called the effects of climate change “manageable.”

Which I suppose they are, as long as you’re wealthy and able to move around at will. But it’s not manageable to the corn farmers losing their crops (many are just chopping them down), the ranchers selling off their cattle, the thousands of people in Colorado burned out of their homes in fires caused by the worst drought since 1956 or those who will lose their homes or jobs to fire, flood, drought or whatever in coming years. How will they “manage”?

All of this is the tip of the iceberg, and the iceberg is, of course, melting. As Bill McKibben points out in a piece to be published in Rolling Stone on Friday, not only was May the warmest on record for the Northern Hemisphere, not only was it “the 327th consecutive month in which the temperature of the entire globe exceeded the 20th-century average,” but it was also followed by a June in which some 3,200 heat records were broken in the United States.

The first page alone of the Rolling Stone article will scare the pants off you, but the chorus needs to grow bigger, louder and stronger. That’s why the forthcoming book (due July 24) from Climate Central, “Global Weirdness,” is so welcome. “Global Weirdness,” which explains climate change in simple, easy-to-understand language and ultrashort chapters, is intentionally calm because, says Michael Lemonick, one of the authors: “Some people respond well to ‘Big trouble is coming and we must do something immediately,’ but others are overwhelmed and just turn off. We believe that if you look at all the available evidence it’s clear we’re pushing the earth into a regime where it hasn’t been before, and the effects could well be disastrous.”

The time to avoid calamitous effects has likely passed. This doesn’t mean the situation is hopeless, but the longer we wait to curb emissions, the worse and longer-lasting the effects. Climate Central’s projections show that the biggest cities in Florida, and a great deal of the Northeast coastline (including New York City), will be underwater by 2100, when almost everyone now alive will have “managed” to leave the scene. Of course, the calamities won’t be limited to North America, nor is 2100 some magical expiration date; the end isn’t in sight.

Only reducing carbon emissions can keep matters from becoming worse. Thus the argument for a tax on carbon has never been stronger, but neither has the power of the energy companies to compel legislative paralysis on this issue. The way to a carbon tax is through Congress and the White House, but installing a responsible Congress means campaign-finance reform, another challenge of which Americans are aware but clueless about how to address. But feelings of helplessness are practically un-American: we have the opportunity to demand principled and independent leadership, if we will only try.

It was just about a year ago that we saw the beginnings of what is now called the Occupy movement. And although income inequality has hardly been “solved,” it’s a bigger part of the conversation now, and that may well spell Romney’s downfall. A similar movement — one that, as McKibben told me, “identifies the fossil fuel industry as the real enemy in the climate fight, which is ultimately a moral battle” — could possibly get things moving. If we can force our next president to turn his attention to a problem that may well dwarf the economy in scale, perhaps American exceptionalism will come to mean leadership in the right direction.

 

Globalwarming
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Meta-Thinking on a (Rainy) Thursday

P733

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On This Day: July 19

Updated July 18, 2012, 2:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On July 19, 1941, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill launched his “V for Victory” campaign in Europe.

Go to article »

On July 19, 1834, Edgar Degas, the French Impressionist painter and sculptor, was born. Following his death on September 27, 1917, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1553 King Henry VIII’s daughter Mary was proclaimed Queen of England after pretender Lady Jane Grey was deposed.
1848 A pioneer women’s rights convention convened in Seneca Falls, N.Y.
1870 The Franco-Prussian war, which led to the unification of the German states, began.
1969 Apollo 11, with Neil Armstrong, Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin and Michael Collins on board, went into orbit around the moon.
1979 The Nicaraguan capital of Managua fell to Sandinista guerrillas.
1980 The Summer Olympics began in Moscow with dozens of nations boycotting because of Soviet military intervention in Afghanistan.
1984 Congresswoman Geraldine A. Ferraro of New York won the Democratic nomination for vice president at the party’s convention in San Francisco.
1986 Caroline Kennedy, daughter of President John F. Kennedy, married Edwin A. Schlossberg.
1989 A United Air Lines DC-10 crashed while making an emergency landing at Sioux City, Iowa, killing 112 people; 184 survived.
2005 President George W. Bush announced his choice of federal appeals court judge John Roberts to replace Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor.
2011 Summoned by British lawmakers to answer for a phone hacking and bribery scandal at one of his tabloids, media mogul Rupert Murdoch said he was humbled and ashamed, but accepted no responsibility for wrongdoing.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

George McGovern, Former U.S. senator, presidential candidate

Former U.S senator and presidential candidate George McGovern turns 90 years old today.

AP Photo/Nati Harnik

Anthony Edwards, Actor (“ER”)

Actor Anthony Edwards (“ER”) turns 50 years old today.

AP Photo/Peter Kramer

1940 Vikki Carr, Singer, turns 72
1944 Commander Cody, Country singer, musician, turns 68
1945 George Dzundza, Actor, turns 67
1946 Ilie Nastase, Tennis hall of famer, turns 66
1947 Brian May, Rock musician (Queen), turns 65
1960 Atom Egoyan, Director, turns 52
1961 Campbell Scott, Actor, turns 51
1976 Benedict Cumberbatch, Actor, turns 36

 

Historic Birthdays

Edgar Degas 7/19/1834 – 9/27/1917 French painter and sculptor.Go to obituary »
47 Samuel Colt 7/19/1814 – 1/10/1862
American firearms manufacturer
84 Mary Ann Bickerdyke 7/19/1817 – 11/8/1901
American Civil War nurse
72 Edward Charles Pickering 7/19/1846 – 2/3/1919
American physicist and astronomer
66 Lizzie Borden 7/19/1860 – 6/1/1927
American alleged murderer of her father and stepmother
73 Charles Horace Mayo 7/19/1865 – 5/26/1939
American surgeon and founder of the Mayo Clinic
60 Alice Nelson Dunbar 7/19/1875 – 9/18/1935
American novelist, poet and essayist
84 A. J. Cronin 7/19/1896 – 1/6/1981
Scottish novelist and physician
81 Herbert Marcuse 7/19/1898 – 7/29/1979
German-born American political philosopher
66 Edgar Snow 7/19/1905 – 2/15/1972
American journalist and author