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Saturday, November 03, 2007

Snap Judgment

Even After Much Reflection, 'Blink' Is a Disappointment

TWO THIRDS of the way through Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking, the follow-up to his massively successful and influential bestseller The Tipping Point, Malcolm Gladwell writes:

As Wilson puts it, what happens is that we come up with a plausible-sounding reason for why we might like or dislike something, and then we adjust our true preference to be in line with that plausible-sounding reason.
Gladwell is writing about strawberry jam and why people prefer some brands over others, but the passage above could easily be applied to all of Blink. In trying to persuade the reader that instantaneous judgments are not only reliable and trustworthy but also more effective than those made after considerable analysis, he undermines his argument time and time again with examples of negative consequences of actions based on first impressions. Gladwell seems to wish to have it both ways: to advocate unequivocally for following one's gut (see, for example, the book's subtitle) while also warning of that tactic's dangers. For all of its research, the book feels cobbled together and too skittish, as if Gladwell, knowing he shouldn't be as glib about unthinking reactions as the marketplace would like him to be, can't help acknowledging his reporting pedigree by slipping in a cautionary tale to balance out every instance of a successful blink.

Rating: **1/2 (of 5)

Friday, November 02, 2007

That's Nice, Coach

The Excellent 'Friday Night Lights' Delves Far Beyond High School Football

ON THE advice of numerous television critics and my perceptive sister-in-law, Mrs. SC and I are working our way through season 1 of Friday Night Lights on DVD. And we're wondering why it took us so long to give this show a shot. Based on Buzz Bissinger's well regarded nonfiction book of the same name, the series follows the fictional Panthers, the football team from Dillon High School, in Texas, where the sport approaches religion. But saying the show is about high school football is like saying The Office is about paper. Friday Night Lights is about how children navigate a world that expects them to act like adults. It's about how powerful and transcendent something as pedestrian and banal as football can be in a faded town that doesn't have much left. And it's about how spouses who both love and see flaws in each other hold a marriage together among a community that has placed them under a microscope.

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Mr. Gillick's To-Do List

One Phan's Thoughts on Getting the Phillies to the Next Level

RUBEN AMARO Jr. may be calling his favorite printer and asking her to ready new business cards, but for now Pat Gillick remains the man charged with returning the Phillies to the postseason and advancing them further than a three-game, first-round sweep. Now that the euphoria of the division title has faded, it's time to compile Gillick's off-season to-do list. In no particular order:

1. Decide on Brett Myers's role once and for all. With Joe Torre gone from the Yankees, Mariano Rivera says he'll look to leave the Bronx, and there are whispers that the Phils may be interested. If Rivera ended up in Philadelphia, Myers would return to the rotation. I think he did a good enough job in the closer's role to warrant keeping him there, but with only one starter who was a reliable option for the entire season, the Phillies could certainly use Myers pitching seven innings every fifth day as well. Either way, they need to figure out what he is so that he can prepare himself mentally and physically beginning in spring training.

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Thursday, November 01, 2007

Novel Ambitions

For the Next Month, Finding a New Dream to Chase

WRITERS WRITE, I posted early this year, and the freelance career I launched with that axiom in mind has gone better than I had hoped. Like so many of us who put fingertips to keyboard, though, I have a loftier goal in mind; more a dream, really. I can't say I have the Great American Novel clattering around in my brain somewhere, but for years I've harbored the desire to get some fiction published. Life has consistently gotten in the way, but more than that, I've never committed myself to the kind of discipline it takes, and there's probably been a fair share of fearing failure mixed in there.

Well, enough is enough.

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  • On sports, pop culture, and other important matters, in Philadelphia and beyond.

    By Tom Durso

    About Shallow Center

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    Shallow Center @ Blogger (6.2003 - 10.2004)

    My day job.

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  • "But in their eyes / Murder comes by sea and from the skies / It's shiny and it's quick to take their lives / And it's cruel in love and war there are no rules." | Kirsty MacColl and Johnny Marr, "Children of the Revolution"

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