cruel and unusual collective bargaining: bagpipes!!!

Sir? Put them down and back away with your dirk in clear view

FishbowlNYC today alerts raincoaster (and, no doubt, eighteen million other people) to the fact that the Writer’s Guild East has begun a return to the barefisted, take no prisoners style of union negotiation of yore. Jimmy Hoffa would be proud.

They’re using bagpipes.

If you were listening closely during this morning’s Early Show on CBS, you probably heard the dirge of bagpipes. Why bagpipes? “To mark the slow death of quality news at CBS,” says the Writers Guild of America East chapter, who staged the rally outside the Early Show studios to “call attention to the declining quality of news at CBS, quality they assert will further decline if CBS is successful in its contract negotiation demand to take newswriters/producers out of the union, under which protection they have worked for more than 40 years.”

CBS News staffers have been working without a contract since April 1, 2005.

One is reminded, one is, of the infamous Good-Looking Bagpiper Guy of Gastown a few years ago. This fellow was, indeed, very good-looking. But he was, verily, the worst bagpiper ever to manhandle a pipe, and that is saying a great deal.

They say that glass is not a solid but rather a supercooled liquid; I believe it, because when he played outside the windows of the store I worked in, you could almost see the molecules of glass scrambling over one another in a desperate bid to escape the pane.

Unfortunately, Mr. G-L B G o’G was far less mobile; he’d set up shop about 10:30 and play without rest or (apparently) breath, and certainly without benefit of lessons, for a good eight to ten hours a day. He made good money, too, because A) tourists can see better than they can hear, particularly when there are buses on the street and B) none of them had to stick around and listen to that for more than a couple of minutes.

We, however…

So our company finally took pity on us and, with a coalition of other local businesses, lobbied City Hall for a new bylaw that would limit the length of time a busker could stay in one place. We had nothing against the pan pipers, nor even the Chinese fellow who played that violin thing that sounded like a Siamese cat being tortured; we were focused solely on Mr. G-L B G o’G. And we lost.

So our very clever building management (who had their offices immediately above Mr. G-L B G o’G‘s favorite piping spot, although I am certain that didn’t factor into this at all, no, not at all) made a deal with the unsuspecting piper.

Go play at City Hall on Tuesday and we’ll give you 150% of your normal daily earnings.”

Wednesday comes along and Hey, presto! Bylaw passed.

Now THAT would be practical!

intimidation, a poster from Despair.com

Intimidation. Any questions? That's me on the right.

From the fine line of motivational office decor at Despair.com.

British government censors itself

it could happenSelf-censorship is the most dangerous and insidious kind of censorship, as well as the most risible. Here we see a perfect example of a snake swallowing its own tail and vanishing in a puff of laughter.

BoingBoing reports that the British government, as part of an initiative to encourage and demonstrate connectivity and technological sophistication at a deep level in public service, has posted a video to YouTube. Well bully for them.

Because another branch of that selfsame department whose incredible culture of communication has “released efficiencies by standardisation, simplification and sharing, broadening and deepening of government’s professionalism in terms of the planning, delivery, management, skills and governance of IT enabled change,” has contacted YouTube and gotten the video removed, because it was posted without permission of the copyright holder. Itself.

No, I’m serious. Here’s the report:

UK government censors YouTube vid it posted itself

The UK cabinet office has censored a video that another branch of government had previously posted off of YouTube — ironically, the video was about how the government could be more coordinated:

A video called Transformational Government can no longer be viewed on the site, instead users get a box of red text stating: “This video has been removed at the request of copyright owner COI Television because its content was used without permission.

COI Television is actually part of the Cabinet Office and the further irony of the video being about transformational government was not lost on one critic.

A spokesman for independent body Public Sector Forums, told silicon.com: “The COI is part of the Cabinet Office. So it looks like the Cabinet Office’s initiative has fallen at the first hurdle and ironically, it’s thanks to a lack of joined-upness between parts of its own ministry.” LINK

May I just note the fact that we already have a word, “connectedness,” which not only expresses the same thought as the expression “joined-upness” but also sounds far less like it came from someone taking remedial breathing class for the second time.

For those who love to slow down to look at traffic wrecks, here is the link to the dead YouTube. Nobody cared enough to stick it on GoogleVids; I checked. For those of you who prefer to watch wrecks in progress, here is the remaining video in the series. The clock is obviously ticking on this one, though, so get your chewy, bureaucratic joined-upness while it’s hawt!

VanityFair.com: best. faq. ever.

Just like my house! 

-I think James Wolcott is fab. [seriously, who among us doesn’t have a crush on Jimbo?] I’ve tacked his contributor’s picture to my wall, and every night I read some sonnets, such as “Woman’s Constancy,” to my Little Jim, as I call him. I’ve bought these cutouts of Ken-doll clothes and sometimes dress Jim up. Could you let him know green corduroy works best with his skin tone?

Comments and questions should be directed to . Please note that because of the volume of feedback received, not every message can be answered individually. Press requests should be directed to .

VF Hollywood IssueAs always, read all FAQs before even thinking about framing a question in your minds, much less taking up the valuable time of their well-bred and expensively-educated interns with a misdirected or simply misguided query.

Such as:

-To whom would one submit Frequently Asked Question questions?

What? 

-My Aunt Verity wants this old issue of Vanity Fair. It had a story on some rich guy who dated models. He had gray hair, if that helps. Aunt Verity can’t remember the month or year of the magazine—or who was on the cover either. Can I get a copy of it for her?

If you can’t remember the date of the issue in which a particular story appeared, please call 212-286-8180, and we will try to help you. All requests for back issues should be sent to . You can also call 800-365-0635 for issues dating from January 1999. Individual copies are available for $9.45 each (including first-class postage and handling) and should arrive within four to six weeks. To expedite your order, you may include a personal express-mail account number; the charge per issue is $4.95.

-Right. I’m in cashier school in Modesto. I can’t possibly fork over 30 bucks to reread that Michael Shnayerson piece on Ira Rennert.

Why not try your local library instead? Look for the Reader’s Guide to Periodical Literature or use your library’s Web site by clicking on the periodicals link and using the search function.

-I’ve got a scorching-hot tip for Dominick Dunne. I really can’t say what it is, but it involves a very famous cousin of a really rich daughter of this high-society lady who recently had her bejeweled Pacarana stolen by an Oscar-winning set designer. Whom can I call?

Gems such as these should be e-mailed to . If they sound credible, they will be presented to the diarist, who will either follow up on your lead or dismiss it as imaginative drivel.

-Graydon Carter’s “Editor’s Letter” really got my goat, who ate it and became quite ill. I’m appalled and want to let him know.

To send letters to the editor, click CONTACT US, or e-mail us at . You can also fax your correspondence to 212-286-4324. In all cases, be sure to include your name, address, and daytime phone number. Vanity Fair reserves the right to edit your submission and publish or otherwise use it in any medium. All submissions become the property of Vanity Fair.

-Man, I love that Proust guy‘s questionnaire. So probing. Has he got any books out I can buy?

To purchase books by contributing editors and photographers, as well as copies of classic covers, click V.F. STORE.

-Our glee club hopes to perform a choral version of a Vanity Fair story. We were thinking of Bruce Weber’s photo portfolio on Scandinavian lingerie, “Swede Surrender.” How does a club, company, school, or organization get a reprint of a previously published piece?

To ask permission to reprint a picture or article in any medium, please fax a request to 212-630-5883, contact , or call 212-630-5656. For press requests, contact . For personal reading purposes—if you know the article’s issue date—e-mail or call Back Issues at 1-800-365-0635.

-I’m the publicist for Glom Altoidov, the Uzbek sausage king. How can I get him into the Vanity Fair party the night of the Oscars—along with his Afghan hound, Follicula?

The party is by invitation only. Prostration, self-flagellation, or coquetry will hold no sway with V.F.’s editors, though such behavior is wildly entertaining. Animals are not admitted. Press inquiries regarding the party, and press inquiries only, should be directed to .

And so on…I really wanted to close this with the pic of Parker and Benchley forming an archway of mops, under which presided Conde Nast, with a doily for vestments, but it’s not out there and my scanner’s not working. Ah well, of such suffering is great art born. Right?

The Round Table by Hirshfeld

OGMD: sometimes a meme can easily be seen

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