30 Mayıs 2012 Çarşamba

Celebrations

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I've been reading comment threads, and at least one person on Metafilter said just how I feel...


"AND THEN THE EWOKS ROCK OUT"
posted by middleclasstool at 8:15 PM on November 4



Also from MetaFilter:

"John McCain should concede more often, he's really good at it!"
posted by finite at 8:25 PM on November 4

"Wisconsin is declared in our hearts."
posted by drezdn at 8:51 PM on November 4

"Gun Owner For Obama!! I'm so happy, I won't even go out and shoot randomly into the air in celebration!"
posted by Balisong at 8:53 PM on November 4

"Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

Sincerely,
Rest of the World."
posted by hoskala at 8:56 PM on November 4

"Truly the end of an error."
posted by punkfloyd at 5:03 AM on November 5

"...
But I'm still thrilled that he won. We now have a president who said "The Wire" is his favorite show and, for some insane reason, this gives me great hope for the future. Absurd really, the things we pin our hopes on.

Just dear god/cthulhu/fsm, please don't let Obama turn into a Carcetti."
posted by pandaharma at 1:04 AM on November 5



I love The Wire. But I've only seen the first four seasons. So far Carcetti's not so bad. What I can't help thinking of what one of the former Baltimore mayors told him being mayor was like. Something like "Every day you go into your office and eat one bowl of shit after another -- it just keeps coming, in beautiful golden bowls". I'm afraid that's what Obama's got in front him him now...


A comment I left here but want to repeat on my own blog:


I had a cool experience Friday night. I was on an overnight bus out of Chicago, and most of the other people on the bus were black. The driver on the PA system should've been a DJ. He was making jokes, telling stories, and wishing us all a smooth ride... And somewhere in there he said "It's gonna be a whole new world out there after Tuesday, you just watch," and the whole (double decker) bus spontaneously cheered, and the little eleven year old girl sitting next to me was grinning so hard I thought she was going to break her face. And the driver went on about how the city of Chicago was just going to go nuts, and what a great thing it was for the city... But he personally was gonna stay as far away as he could get, because the traffic was gonna be a nightmare.

Late night, bus full of strangers, all so excited, all feeling like the world is about to change, and for once, like they're the ones changing it... Pretty unforgettable.



And Obama himself, as usual, captures the mood:

A man touched down on the moon, a wall came down in Berlin, a world was connected by our own science and imagination. And this year, in this election, [a black woman who remembers when black people and women weren't allow to vote] touched her finger to a screen, and cast her vote, because after 106 years in America, through the best of times and the darkest of hours, she knows how America can change. Yes we can.

The Post Copyright World

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So I've thought for a little while that copyright is more or less going away whether we like it or not. How, then, do creative people make money by entertaining us? The same way they did before audio recording or the printing press were invented -- live performances and generous patrons.

But the patrons don't just have to be wealthy aristocrats these days. I think what happens is, you release a couple of titles -- books, albums, whatever, for free. Build up a fanbase. Then you hold the next work hostage. You set a fundraising target, and you release the work once that target has been met. If you have millions of fans, your target can be millions of dollars. All of them will contribute five or ten. If you have a couple hundred fans, your target can be a couple hundred dollars. Someone who's really eager will contribute extra, or talk their friends into joining in, to get the next work out that much faster.

These schemes are starting to show up, and I'm interested to see whether they take off.

Here's a site where you fund investigative journalism. Once a story gets enough funding, the investigation gets done. I might actually try this.

One of my favorite essayists, the Real Live Preacher Gordon Atkinson, has proposed to publish his next book this way.

Maybe I can get research funding this way. Want me to work on this idea for a fiber optic vibration sensor I've got? Send me five bucks. I'll start when I get to $10,000...

Mathematical Grammar

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I'm strongly of the opinion that math is nothing more or less than a language. All languages are different, and it's harder to say certain things in some languages than in others. Math is particularly well suited toward making quantitative statements, and it's unusually difficult to contradict yourself in the language of Math... Or rather, it's more obvious when you've contradicted yourself, when you express something in the language of Math, than it is in English.

It takes some work to express qualitative statements like "That leaf is yellow" in Math, but if we resort to less than or greater than signs, or even "approximately equal" signs, we can usually do it:



That may need a little context, but the basic meaning is clear if you speak Math. (I could also have given RGB color values or even hex color codes, but I don't know those off the top of my head. In any case, there are usually lots of ways to quantify a quality like "color.")

Of course, it's usually much easier to understand Math if you provide the necessary context in English or another natural language... Rather like programming languages, which are just a dialect of Math really -- commenting your code makes it a lot easier to read.

But you know, some of the need for context is reduced by certain conventions which are a part of the grammar of Math, but which are rarely if ever formally stated. When students screw these up, it makes their work a lot harder to read or grade. I find it interesting that everyone eventually picks up on these conventions, all over the world, but no one ever really talks about them. For instance, above I used the greek letter "lamda" without saying what it meant. But to anyone who has had any contact with the physics community, "lamda" means wavelength. The fact that I talked about color and gave a number on the scale of the wavelength of light makes the interpretation certain. If you're a physics person, I don't need to tell you that I'm talking about wavelength there, and not some kind of computer color code. I should probably specify that the wavelength I'm talking about is that of the light reflected from the leaf, but the subscript "Leaf" and the context are again probably enough for you to guess that too.

Here are some of the unwritten rules that come immediately to mind:

Letters from the beginning of the Roman alphabet -- these are usually constants, especially if they are upper case.

Upper Case Roman Letters - these also frequently indicate a constant quantity, especially if the letter is from the beginning of the alphabet. Capital "C" and capital "K" are very popular choices to represent a constant because "constant" starts with a "C" in English and a "K" in German. Upper case Roman letters may also stand for matrices or tensors -- Usually you can tell which is which, because if it's a matrix or a tensor, all of the other terms in the equation will also be a matrices or tensors, so that knowing one symbol gives you hints about the others. (Also, I like to put little upside-down caret hats on my matrices. Most people use right-side-up carets, but I like to reserve those for unit vectors.) If you see a capital X, Y, or Z, however, you know it's likely to be a matrix, because those are almost never used for constants. Which brings me to my next rule.

The symbols x, y, z, and t are reserved for position and time - These are pretty much always variables, and nearly always stand for quantities with units of length, or in the case of t, of time. Sometimes students use "x" to stand for other quantities, because it's a popular choice to stand for any unknown quantity in high school algebra classes, but in the world of math-using professionals, this is a bad idea. Using "x" for a quantity that does not have units of length will confuse people unless you make it very clear what it does stand for. And even then, there are usually better, more conventional choices. If, for instance, the quantity is a pressure, use a "p"(preferably lower-case). If it's a temperature, go for the upper case "T," because the upper-case-letter-means-constant rule is not as firm as the lower-case-t-means-time rule. If it's a frequency, use "f" or "nu"... Most things have their own conventional symbols, in other words, specifically to avoid the problem of using "x" for everything. Save that for position. If there really is no conventional symbol for your quantity, use the lower case Greek letter xi. That's one of few letters that doesn't, by convention, already stand for something else (at least not in physics)

If it's a constant with units of length or time, use subscripts -- the unadorned x, y, z, and t are read as variables, but if you stick a subscripted number (not a letter) on them, they will be read as constants. A good choice is x-subscript-0 or t-subscript-1. In fact, almost anything with a suscripted number will be read as a constant, regardless of the other rules in this list.

Letters from the middle of the alphabet are integers -- In particular, do not use upper or lower case "N" to mean something that is not an integer, because it will confuse people. The letter "m", especially in lower case, is almost always an integer too. In computer science, so are "i", "j", and "k". In physics, however, it is not wise to use these symbols for integers unless they are appearing as an index or subscript. That's because these symbols have other meanings already. ("o" is never used because it looks just like zero.)

Lower case i means square root of negative one -- you can't use lower case "i" for any variable, because its meaning is already assigned. (Likewise that of "e" and lower case "pi" which stand for the natural base of logarithms, and the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, respectively.) The exception to the "i" rule is if you are an electrical engineer, in which case you may use lower case "i" for current if you must. (I have no idea why "I" is the conventional symbol for current -- physicists use it too, but in upper case). Electrical engineers use "j" for the square root of negative one. As for "k" -- that is a seriously overused letter. It has seemingly dozens of conventional uses. It is often used for Boltzmann's constant, though I prefer to give it a subscript for that. In my world it is the wavenumber of light. But it may also be the so-called "lattice constant" for a crystal, a related but different concept. People use it for constants because the German "konstant" is spelled with a "k" even though it does not conform to the other rules about constant names. Plus, as I said, it's a popular index name, and used as a subscript usually represents an integer. In short, don't call anything else "k" unless you have to.

Lower case Greek letters are variables -- frequently, but not always. If you're going to use one to stand for a constant, though, I think you should stick a subscript on it, same as with x, y, z, and t. If you're in need of a good name for your variable, pick a lower case Greek letter. Of course, many of them already have conventional interpretations within a given field. As I said, "lamda" is wavlength, "nu" is frequency, "omega" is angular frequency, to me. "Iota" isn't used because it looks too much like "i". Lower case "mu" is a magnetic or electric dipole moment (as well as being the symbol for the prefix "micro"). Both lower and upper case "gamma" stand for decay rates, in my field. Lower and upper case "Psi" stand for quantum wavefunctions. Lowercase "alpha" is an absorption or loss coefficient... Those conventions are specific to my subfield. But there are also some broader rules: "theta" and "phi" are angles or phases to almost everyone. Lower case "delta" stuck in front of another variable means "a small change" in that variable, and upper case delta stuck in front a variable means the same thing, or by itself means "the difference between two quantities" (lower case "d" used in calculus to indicate a derivative.) Epsilon means "a small quantity" usually, as can lower case delta when used by itself. That still leaves a lot of letters, though, and I think most math people in all fields do read lower case Greek letters as variables. Again, I especially like "xi" and "zeta" for new variables I'm introducing because they don't already have conventional interpretations.

Use tildes primes, and subscripts to indicate related quantities -- If you start out with some variable "p" and then you introduce a new variable which is p*e^i*omega*t, a good name for the new variable is "p-tilde" or p with a tilde on top. You can also use "p-prime," which is p with an aprostrophe thing after it, though I prefer to reserve this notation for the derivative of p. A third alternative is to stick a subscript on it. For this example I might use "p-subscript-rot" because I think of this as p-rotating-with-the-field. For some letters you can also get away with switching between a Roman letter and a related Greek letter -- go from "r" to "rho" for instance, or from "b" to "beta."

Capital Greek Letters aren't good variable names -- Okay, you can get away with capital Psi, Theta, Gamma, and a few others, but capital "Sigma" is the summation symbol, and does not stand for a quantity at all. Likewise capital "Pi" (which must be written carefully to distinguish it from lower case "pi") means "multiply all of the terms in this sequence." Capital Delta, as mentioned before can be a variable indicating the different between two quantities, but it is usually a label used before a quantity to indicate a change in that quantity. Many of the other capital Greek letters look too much like their Roman counterparts to be useful.

Then there are all the different "hats" -- vector hats, unit vector carets, dots and double dots to indicate derivatives, bars to indicate averages... And specialized notations like Einstein summation indices, the use of parentheses, square brackets, and curly brackets... I would say these all serve a more or less "grammatical" function. (Then there are things like "bra-ket" notation and quantum field theory's "contraction" notation. Those aren't exactly grammatical, they're just a sort of shorthand.)

I'm sure if I surveyed some friends we could come up with a lot more rules like this, but I don't think anyone ever taught them too us formally. We just learned them, the same way you learn the grammar for any language that every one around you is speaking and writing. The rules are as weird and full of exceptions as the rules of English grammar, which is why mathematicians may not like to talk about them -- they like to pretend math is completely logical. But they serve a real purpose, just like English grammar. You try grading the work of a student who doesn't follow them. It's unreadable.

Progress of Science

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Science is hard and in general, get two scientists together and you'll have three opinions. But slowly and unsteadily, a consensus emerges, and the human race gets a little wiser.

None of this is news anymore, but I wanted to recognize some really cool results that have come out recently.

One is "just" a simulation -- but a good simulation is a lot of work. This one shows that the ever-victorious Standard Model correctly predicts the mass of atoms within 5% of their measured values. The other 5% is a mystery that those expensive particle collider experiments are designed to solve. The 95% is a pretty impressive triumph for an increasingly awesome theory.

From a theoretical result about very small scales we move to an observational result about very large scales. For the first time, astronomers have succeeded in takingpictures of planets in other solar systems. They're not the greatest looking pictures, but considering that any picture like this was considered impossible a few years ago, I think they're beautiful. We know now, in a visual, almost visceral way, that our solar system is one of many.

I also think it's worth talking about the fact that India's first unmanned lunar spacecraft has successfully entered orbit around the moon. The more active space programs, the better, as far as I'm concerned. NASA desperately needs some competition. And it is a hopeful sign of progress for the human race as a whole when the so-called Western and Non-Western worlds are each capable of and committed to science on this scale. Space exploration should be a human activity, not limited to a specific culture. Practically all science fiction fans agree.

A couple of more links I want to throw in while I'm linking:

Memoirs of a Space Engineer gives a couple of very real, very entertaining anecdotes about the essence of engineering: problem solving.

And The Necessity of Mathematics is an essay by Science Blogger Blake Stacey about the role mathematics plays in science, with some insightful examples that feel like little revelations in themselves.

Christmas Movies

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The longer I go without posting, the more pressure there is to write a post worth reading, when I do. And yet. My ideas for posts are pretty much limited to 1) a review of the quality of various web-based job search engines 2) fretful soul searching about what kind of job I really want, and how much I'm willing to compromise, and whether it's inevitable that women will always compromise more than men 3) that really weird dream I had last night. Y'know, I'm an anxious person. I could fill three blogs with my anxiety. But who wants to read that? Although Woody Allen's made a pretty good career out of it, come to think of it...

Anyway, that leaves me with little to write about besides the Christmas movies we've watched so far this year: National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation, We're No Angels (1955), While You Were Sleeping. Three movies that manage to be sweet without being saccharine (okay, maybe While You Were Sleeping counts as saccharine.)


Christmas Vacation
and While You Were Sleeping actually go pretty well together. The latter is about a lonely woman who wants a family so badly that she's willing to resort to fraud to join one. "Lucy, you're born into a family. You do not join them like you do the Marines."

But the family she's trying to join is almost as ridiculous as the Griswolds of National Lampoon fame. Watching them together makes one really appreciate one's ridiculous relatives and in-laws. (Eddie: "Yeah, I got the daughter in the clinic, getting cured off the Wild Turkey. And, the older boy, bless his soul, is preparing for his career." Clark: "College?" Eddie: "Carnival." Clark: "You got to be proud.")

We're No Angles has a similar theme. Three escaped convicts find themselves caring about a family they'd meant to rob. "We came here to rob them and that's what we're gonna do - beat their heads in, gouge their eyes out, slash their throats. Soon as we wash the dishes." The convicts are lonely.

One thing I see, watching these movies and others like them, is how much harder it is to be "normal" than I thought as a kid. I used to think that getting married, having a house and a family and a decent job was the easy road. Every family I knew had that. Now I see that's because of selection bias. Partly it's that people who've won themselves stable relationships and jobs are more likely to have kids. And then my sample was skewed even further by the neighborhoods I grew up in and the people we knew. Now I know more people, and now I've had a taste of how much work and luck are actually involved in achieving the kind of by turns tedious and ridiculous life. It's sort of the opposite of the message you get from a movie like American Beauty. I sort of want to see Chevy Chase's character and Kevin Spacey's character have a beer and talk about it. They're similar guys, and they both have... fantasies, but ultimately Clark Griswold is happy, despite everything.

A recent New York Times article points out that some of that same tension -- family vs freedom -- is at the core of that other classic Christmas movie, It's a Wonderful Life.

And I've got one more movie to throw into the mix, with, I think, a related theme: Trainspotting. Just read the opening monologue. So much disdain for the kind of family life that Christmas movies celebrate. But the alternative he gives is heroin addiction, and whatever else the movie does, it doesn't make heroin addiction seem like an attractive lifestyle.

When you're a kid, you can't help but take for granted the kind of life you're born into. If that life is relatively secure, and everyone you know lives the same way, and if you haven't lived long enough to see institutions crumble and to experience failure, then you're not going to understand how small the kind of island of stability that you grew up in probably is. Though it may seem boring, stability is in fact a difficult achievement in a chaotic world. Just ask Zuzu.

Christmas movies seem to be the designated genre for reminding us of this, and I really appreciate them more, as an adult.

26 Mayıs 2012 Cumartesi

Get me excited about Minne-SNOW-ta

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I bet that title's not new to native Minnesotans, but it was new to me when I heard someone on some '80s game show (might've been "Press Your Luck") use it on game show network the other day.

Anyway, I'm hanging out a lot more often in the Twin Cities area these day, and of course looking for jobs there and preparing to move. And unfortunately, that means leaving Chicago. I love Chicago.

I'm reading a few Minnesota blogs to try to get into the spirit: Minneapolis Metblogs, and News Cut, and Clara's Minneapolis / St. Paul Blog, and taken together they're almost but not quite comparable to Chicagoist.

They have informed me about the St. Paul Winter Carnival, and about the never-ending senate race (I know, I know, an Illinoian is in no position to make fun of Minnesotans for only having one senator...) but while those are good general interest topics, I'm looking for some special interest type stuff as well.

I'm a science fiction fan -- where can I meet and hang out with other fans in the Twin Cities? How about writers groups?

What are the fun parts of downtown, for when you just want a day of pizza, beer, window-shopping and people watching, amateur photography, maybe a free concert or festival in the summer? Ken and I used to take the train to downtown Chicago or Lincoln Park for days like that, but I wasn't so impressed with Nicolet Mall. There must be a park people gather in, no?

For that matter, where is the good pizza? So far as Chicagoans we've been very disappointed.

I'm looking for things to be excited about, in other words. So far we're most excited about the five drive-in theaters in a reasonable radius, but they obviously aren't open this time of year. What else is there?

And if anyone mentions ice-fishing, by the way, they will get a withering glare. I don't ice-fish. (I was pretty sure, until I started going to Minnesota, that nobody did. I interpreted the first couple of suggestions as sarcasm.)

(Summer camping recommendations are welcome, though.)

What I Did on my Christmas Vacation

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I got Presents from Ken and gave him some



And then we flew to Colorado to visit my parents and my sister (who gave us more presents), and then my parents took us on a train





Through the mountains



It was ten degrees when we got off at Glenwood Springs, but we swam in the hot springs anyway.



When Ken and I got back to Minnesota, I tried out the bread machine he got me for Christmas on a deep dish pizza dough recipe.



Not as good as Giordano's, but better than most of what you can get in Minneapolis...

We also ate Colorado Style Pizza in Glenwood Springs at Beau Jo's. Delicious!

It sure was a great Christmas Vacation. Thanks Mom and Dad!

Buy This Book

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Gordon Atkinson -- the Real Live Preacher -- is self-publishing his next book.

I've already pre-ordered two copies, one to keep and one to give away. I don't know if I admire Gordon more as a writer or as a person. He's an amazing example of both. His essays are nearly always heartbreakingly honest. They're usually gentle, but occasionally angry. He admits to the kind of self-doubt that most of us are afraid to share even with those who are closest to us. He cares so deeply about the people he writes about that you can't help but care about them too. Just reading his blog makes me less self-absorbed, makes me a better person, I think. And I find myself liking him so much that it's very strange to remind myself, every now and then, that I've never actually met the guy. (Though he does answer e-mails personally, even if the purpose of the e-mail was just a book order...)

Now, normally self-publishing is a good way to lose money. And if someone else makes a lot money off of you in the process, then it's "vanity publishing," and it's a scam.

But in this case, it's different. He's a blog that's maintained a high readership for the better part of a decade. And then consider this account of his previous publishing experience...


FACT: My first book was published by Eerdmans. They sold 3500 copies, for which I was paid $3500. After the 3500 copies were sold, they lost interest in the book. There were 1300 copies left. Even if Eerdmans had sold them, I wouldn’t have made anything on those 1300.

FACT: I bought the remaining copies and sold 900 of them on my blog, making about $9000.


He knows he's got an audience. But he's still too smart to sink a huge investment into a work that might not sell. So he's trying something that I've always wanted to see work: taking pre-orders, and not publishing the book until he gets enough to cover the cost. I think this model could eventually catch on with the recording industry, and who knows, the movie industry even. Decide on a minimum you need to make, and don't publish until you know you're going to make it. Publish a lot of stuff for free first to build a following, like Gordon does on his blog.

Okay, so I'm kind of interested in the publishing model. But I'm a lot more interested in the book, and I want him to reach the target number of orders, which is only 416, quickly, so he can get it into production.

For this reason, and for your own good, I say -- buy this book! Place your orders here.

Procrastinatory Post

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It's no good to blog when I am too wrapped up in myself anyway, fretting about the future. (And by "future" I mean, this summer.) I need to be less reflective, not more. I am reading Starship Troopers to distract myself. And I'm not blogging much, as you can see.

I think I'll get around to doing that "25 things" meme, since I've been tagged by two people on Facebook. In the meantime, though, an oddly comforting long view from Roger Ebert.

Ending Up in a Kind of Soundlessly Spinning Ethereal Void as We All Must

And a clip from an Orson Welles film (F for Fake) linked in the comments there:

The 'Chartes Monologue'

Whew

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Well, I did it. I passed my defense. It went well, with none of the awkwardness of my original proposal talk. I got a certificate that says I have completed all requirements for the PhD, and will be awarded a degree in June. Don't ask me the difference between a degree and a certificate that says I have completed all requirements...

As far as jobs go, I have been incredibly, unjustifiably lucky, especially considering the economy. I applied for 33 positions (I kept count, in an excel file) and then the same company that hired Ken ended up hiring me. That makes everything a thousand times easier, relocation-wise, and it is a very good job. Not a post-doc job, no built-in expiration date.

We have been house-hunting, because after more than a decade of higher education for each of us, and the associated temporary living arrangements, we are ready to move in somewhere indefinitely.

It seems like such a natural happily-ever-after point, after all my infinite anxiety, that it almost demands I end the blog, at least in this incarnation. I wouldn't put it past me to start up another one later. Probably not here, but I'll leave this up, indefinitely, and maybe come back and put in a link, if I start writing somewhere else.

My head's in a million different places, with the stress of finishing things up here, and starting new projects from way behind, and moving, and everything. But I would be a pretty lousy person if I didn't take a moment to count my blessing, and appreciate what I've got. I'm married to the best man I know and I get to work with him every day at doing the kind of work I choose. Life has been more generous to me than I deserve, and I will try, really try, to remember that.

23 Mayıs 2012 Çarşamba

Ada as photographer

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We spent part of Presidents Day morning enjoying the warmth and plant life at the Oak Park Conservatory. In a moment of generosity, I gave four year old Ada my camera and let her wander away to the other rooms to snap pictures. This is her first time taking photographs, and I love to see how different her eye is from mine--and how much bigger the conservatory looks from her perspective. You can see all the photos--larger--here.

Goodbye furniture!

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The Brown Elephant furniture truck arrived early Sunday afternoon to pick up our sofa, matching loveseat and ottomans, but they turned down the loveseat thanks to the cat scratches marring one arm. "We've gotten really picky," they said as they handed me a tax receipt and 25% off coupon.

Ten minutes later I had a listing up on Craig's List under Free. Five minutes after that I got my first response. The women arrived quickly and assured me that the scratched up loveseat was "nothing compared to what our 9 cats have done to our furniture." I helped them heave it onto the roof of their minivan and they "secured" it with bungie cords.

Now I'm not one to perpetuate stereotypes, but I did pause to notice that my second-hand furniture was snubbed by a gay men's charity only to be snapped up by a lesbian couple.

Anyway, last night we watched the Oscars On the Red Carpet broadcast from the rug in the middle of our otherwise empty living room. Ada oohed and ahhed over every dress, while Zoe remarked "They're showing too much of their breasts. It's embarrassing."

Our new furniture arrives on Wednesday!

Just-don't-call-them-Easter eggs

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One of my fondest memories from childhood was dying Easter eggs and hoping my artistic creation would be chosen for the Passover seder plate.

It's a tradition I'm proud to share with my otherwise exclusively Jewish children, and I was even more excited to get coloring when I found this tutorial for dying eggs naturally.

Zoe, Ada and I hunted around the kitchen for color-rich items we could use for our eggs and tried to predict what the results would look like after the boiling and overnight soaking was done.

Because we have a limited number of unused glass jars (we use them for salad dressing, leftovers and simple syrup) and some eggs didn't survive Ada's enthusiastic drop into the pot, we didn't dye very many eggs. But those we did are so pretty it will be hard to decide which one to pick for the seder plate.

 In case you're interested, the blue eggs were made with blueberries; the reddish-brown came from black tea, coffee beans, a cinnamon stick and whole cloves. The light green eggs were the result of green tea and cilantro, and the bright yellow egg was tumeric and a carrot. We dried the eggs and polished them with mineral oil before putting them back in the fridge. Also, this photo doesn't really do them justice--the camera on my Samsung phone is such crap.

Thank you, President Obama

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UntitledToday our President came out in support of gay marriage, and that made me proud to be an American.

I felt extra patriotic when, while assisting my 4 year old in the making of pizzas for dinner, I heard an NPR broadcast discussing the news. They mentioned the fact that--for the first time in history--more Americans support gay marriage than are against it.

I feel like we've come a long way in what seems like a fairly short time. I didn't know any (out) gay people in high school or among my parents' friends. My kids, by contrast, know my cousin is married to another man. They know that some kids have one parent, some have two, and sometimes those two are of the same gender. It's so not a big deal for them it barely registers as worth commenting. It's boring.  What's far more interesting, at least to my second grader, is that sometimes a kid's parents list two different addresses in the school directory. Divorce is more interesting (even scandalous) to a kid than a committed, loving gay marriage.

You can tell that to the defense of marriage nutjobs.

A Mother's Day gift of sibling harmony

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UntitledMother's Day came early for me. My kids chose this weekend to get along with each other.

Friday night Josh had a concert to review, so I took the girls to Hole in the Wall for frozen custard. It was Ada's first time biking anywhere (other than around the block), and Zoe was pretty gracious about waiting for us slow folks (her little sis on training wheels and me on foot) at every intersection. The shop accidentally upsized Zoe's cone from kiddie to full-sized, and rather than gloat about her enormous ice cream, Zoe reassured her jealous sister that she "definitely wouldn't finish all that ice cream." She also took it upon herself to continuously wipe Ada's disgustingly messy chocolate frozen custard face.

UntitledBut the sibling harmony continued on Saturday! Zoe left Ada and me alone to bake Pinterest-inspired pretzels and oatmeal no-bake "energy balls." Then the three of us headed to the library, where Zoe read Ada a long fairy tale book until it was time to head across the street for Zoe's haircut. At the salon, Zoe let Ada sit next to her and play on the iPod Touch while Zoe had her hair reshaped into a stylish graduated bob.

Josh picked us up and the whole family went to the Depot American Diner for lunch. The food was a little off this time, but having the next hour all to myself to do a little shoe shopping more than made up that. And the cherry on my new TOMS shoes was coming home to find Zoe and Ada well intwined on the couch in front of Alice in Wonderland.

Mother's Day Sunday was pretty good too. Josh and the girls let me sleep in, and when I finally padded downstairs, they presented me with cards and fresh crepes. Ada and I played at the newly remodeled Taylor Park while Zoe was at Hebrew school, and Sunday afternoon the whole family headed to UIC Pavilion for some roller derby action. Interestingly enough, I bought Zoe a pack of derby trading cards and she immediately overcame her shyness, hounding all the skaters for autographs.
New haircut
Zoe's new haircut

17 Mayıs 2012 Perşembe

Benefits of Renter's Insurance

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Renters insurance offers coverage for fire-damaged, stolen and lost property items. Insurance companies ask you to figure out if your kitchen, bedroom and dining room have inexpensive property items under $1500, moderately expensive property items between $1,501 and $5,000 or luxury property items over $5,001. This information is placed in your file and used as a barometer later on how much to pay for any claims. Therefore, with renters insurance you can rest easy in your rental knowing that if something happens to your computer, you'll be covered and able to get a replacement.

Assistance with law suits is another benefit of renters insurance. Under the coverage of liability, this insurance offers you legal aid against any lawsuits you might incur. So, if your dog bites the neighbor and they sue you, you get an attorney who will help you fight or negotiate a settlement. It's also important to note that liability coverage is worldwide. As a result, no matter where you go, you will be covered by it.

A lesser known benefit of renters insurance is medical coverage. No, it's not coverage for you or anyone who lives in your household. This coverage extends to your guests regardless of liability. It means that if your great aunt comes for a visit and falls down the stairs because she's wearing slippery shoes, your renters insurance will pay for her doctor's bills. This aspect of renters insurance not only helps you care for your guests, but also helps maintain your relationships.

Peace of mind is the last benefit of renters insurance. Whether you use it or not, the fact that you know it is there will help take a load off your mind. You won't have to spend hours worrying what will happen if you get robbed or involved in a fire. Everything you own will be replaced, which is a comforting thought for anyone. So if you are a worry wart by nature, you'll enjoy this benefit because it'll allow you to get the sleep you need at night or at least give you one less thing to worry about.

Renters insurance is the kind of coverage that can give you a safety net in different areas of your life. For those of you who are on a budget, you will be happy to know that renters insurance is affordable. You can get it for under $600 annually, which translates into around $50 per month or less. This figure is probably less than what you spend every month on your morning coffee. Therefore, renters insurance is definitely an expense you should consider getting if you rent the place you live in.

Energy Saving Tips

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  1. Turn off lights when not in use. Use "task lighting" rather than lighting the whole room unnecessarily for close work.
  2. Replace incandescent lamps, (ie. regular light bulbs) with compact fluorescent lights. While more expensive to purchase, (prices continue to drop and they are now under $2.50 each in packages of 2 to 6 lamps.) they pay for themselves with time, taking 1/4 of the power and having a life of 7 to 10 times a long. They also generate much less heat which is a big bonus during the summer. You will get full life expectancy out of these lamps in open fixtures where the air can circulate and you will get a shorter life in a fully enclosed light fixture due to somewhat higher temperatures lowering the life of the internal electronic circuitry.
    NOTE: do NOT use fluorescent lamps where it can get wet or in places of very high humidity like bathrooms because you do not want moisture getting into the electronics. Also do not mix types of bulbs in one light fixture, that is if you have a lamp that has 2 or more bulbs close together do not use a CFL while others are incandescent because the heat from the older hot bulbs will dramatically shorten the life of the CFL to a fraction of its rated life.
  3. If you are going to use incandescent lamps, (ie. regular light bulbs,) use them with a light dimmer, so that when you don't need as much light you can dim the lights and use less power.
    NOTE: Do NOT use a light dimmer on fluorescent or compact fluorescent lamps (CFL's). unless they are clearly marked that they are designed to be used with dimmers.
  4. Dust your lamps and light fixtures with the power off. Even a thin layer of dust reduced light levels.
  5. Unless absolutely necessary, use a fan rather than an air conditioner during the summer. Of course if you have asthma or other respiratory problems, a heart condition, are a senior, or on many kinds of medication that make you more vulnerable to heatstroke your health is most important and you should continue to use your air conditioner. But you can always decide to set the temperature a bit higher. If you are going to use an air conditioner, get one with a built in timer so you aren't wasting energy cooling your home when nobody is there.
  6. Portable and baseboard electric heaters are real power hogs and if improperly used can be a fire hazard (see the Apartment Safety page). Setting the temperature a couple of degrees lower during the winter can save you a lot of money and you can remain confortable if you wear thicker clothing or an extra layer like a sweater. A ceiling fan is also useful and will force the hotter air that rises to ceiling downards to where you are.
  7. Use curtains and shades on your windows, to keep the heat in during the winter.
  8. Use window shades to reduce or block sunlight and heat during the summer, particularly if you have windows that receive direct sunlight.
  9. Computers and particularly laser printers can really run up your power bills. Keep your printer turned off using the switch on the printer, when not in use. Some printers take as much power as 660 watts, the same as keeping a small microwave oven cooking continuously! We all have a tendancy to keep the computer on if we are not using it because we don't want to wait a couple of minutes to boot up again, but if you are going to be away from the computer for a hour turn it off as you will save more power in that hour than that used to power one 14 watt compact fluorescent lamp for 24 hours.
  10. While there are many small items you will not want to ever turn off such as clocks or perhaps your telephone answering machine, they are costing you too. A 7 watt clock or answering machine, adds up to 0.168 kWh per day. But there are many items which never turn off, they stay in standby mode eating up power. Examples are TV's, Video Cassette recorders, DVD players and Cable TV converters, though you might decide you want to keep your VCR or DVE player plugged in all the time if you don't want to reset their clocks. Each of these items eat up power, but by putting them on a power bar with a power switch (with prices starting at $5 each) you can often save in excess of 0.6 kWh per day (20 kwh/month). NOTE: If you have pay-TV services, particularly pay-per-view, you will want to keep your cable television converter powered up at all times, otherwise the cable company's system may have to reset you as a pay-user each time you turn the power back on to the converter,
  11. Have a hairdrier? Use it sparingly and don't use the maximum heat setting, not only will you save energy, but your scalp will thank you!
  12. Thaw, or partially thaw, frozen foods in the refrigerator before cooking.
  13. Small appliances use less power than larger ones. Save money by using a microwave oven rather than a regular electric oven/stove. Use an electric kettle rather than a stovetop one. If you are buying a toaster, don't buy an extra long slot one, if you aren't going to use the extra long slots, because the extra energy / heat is just going to be wasted going up the open space. Cooking with a microwave oven typically uses less than half the energy of an electric stove/oven because it wastes less heat something to think about on a sweltering hot summer day. All that heat being given off of the stove is wasted energy. Of course there is a possible big downside to this, read: Microwave Ovens destroy food nutrients, Globe and Mail newspaper October 17, 2003. On the other hand, over cooking foods using regular ovens can also destroy nutrients.
  14. When cooking do not open the door if it is possible to examine the food by looking through the window. You can turn off the heat a couple of minutes before the food is ready for stove-top cooking and several minutes in the oven to save money. Also remember to match the size of any pots or skillets you use on electric stove elements.
  15. While I as a tenant have no control over what type of refrigerator the landlord supplies me with, only that it be a working one, when my 1985 "Energy Saver" was replaced (after breaking down in 2003) with a modern Energy Saver, it immediately saved me almost 1 kWh per day. Of course it will cost me in other ways since the landlord will include the cost of the new fridge in his costs when applying for any rent increase. But if there needs to be a replacement anyways, it might as well be a modern "Energy Saver" appliance.
  16. Refrigerators: Keep the refridgerator section at between 2C and 5C (36 to 42° F,) and the freezer at -18C (0° F). These temperatures help ensure food safety, but lowering the temperatures further only wastes power. Don't overcrowd the fridge or freezer, freezers should not be more than 2/3's full. It is important that the refrigerator door closes tightly and forms a tight seal, otherwise, warm air will get in and the unit will have to work harder to keep things cool, costing more energy. If you can put a piece of paper between the door and the gasket and can easily pull the paper out when the door is closed, the gasket is probably worn out and should be replaced. Keep your fridge and the seal around the fridge door clean. Also, don't spend time and waste electricity by "grazing" in front of the refridgerator with the door open to browse through its contents.
  17. Run clothes washers when full. The same applies to dishwashers, but it is even better not to use them at all and to wash your dishes, pot and pans and cutlery by hand.
  18. Do at least two electricity audits of your home, one for the coldest month and one for the hottest. How much power are you using and where can you save? Remember: some of these items though turned on may not be on or fully on during their use but may cycle on an off such as Air Conditioners, etc. and their power usage is less in reality, than if you assume they are fully powered at all times.

Zoolights at Lincoln Park Zoo (FREE)

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Zoolights at Lincoln Park Zoo

Lincoln Park Zoo transforms into a dazzling wonderland with a series of free seasonal festivities for Zoolights, November 25 through January 1.  Enter a winter wonderland illuminated by approximately 2 million lights at Lincoln Park Zoo’s annual ZooLights Presented by ComEd and Charter One. This holiday classic has become one of the Windy City’s must-see seasonal events.

Get your picture taken with Santa through December 23rd, prepare holiday crafts and watch ice carving. Then escape the cold and experience the climates, conditions and animals of four continents: South America, Africa, Asia and Australia in our Regenstein Small Mammal Reptile House. Animal exhibits stay open late.

Hours:
  • Weekends: November 25 - 27; December 2 - 4; December 9 - 11;
  • Nightly: December 16, 2011 – January 1, 2012; 
  • Closed December 24 and 25.

Location:
Lincoln Park Zoo
2200 N. Cannon Drive
Chicago, IL 60614
Admission:
FREE
Website:
For additional information please visit http://www.lpzoo.org/
Location:
Lincoln Park Zoo
2200 N. Cannon Drive
Chicago, IL 60614
Admission:
FREE
Website:
For additional information please visit http://www.lpzoo.org/

Recycle in your building!!

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HOW TO RECYCLE IN YOUR IN YOUR BUILDING



Group Fox has chosen the Single-Stream Recycling program because it is SIMPLE! The single-stream system allows you to combine all recyclables in one container. No need to separate, but items should be loose and not in a sealed/tied garbage bag.  We recommend using a medium sized plastic garbage can (without a bag) in your apartment to collect recyclables. When it’s full, simply bring it down and dump it all into the recycling container.  The Recycling containers are clearly labeled as “Recycling Only” and are located next to the regular trash containers at your building.
The following recyclables can be placed in the designated container (s):



·         Glass jars and bottles·         Aluminum cans, foil and pie tins ·         Tin or Steel cans ·         Cereal boxes, paper towel rolls ·         Cardboard ·         Plastic bottles and containers ·         Junk mail ·         Magazines and catalogs ·         Telephone books ·         Paper bags ·         Office paper and file folders ·         Newspaper and insert




All single-stream recyclables are serviced by a recycling truck that brings the material to an appropriate single-stream recycling facility where the items are hand sorted.  

Did you know?If one person “contaminates” a recycling container with food or liquids the recycling truck is not able to bring it to the recycling plant, instead the  container will be dumped in a land fill.
Recycling is a Shared Responsibility!

Chicago's St. Patricks Day 2012

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Dyeing the Chicago River

Scheduled for 10:00 am, Saturday March 17th 2012. Turning the Chicago river green has been a unique to Chicago for the past 40 years. 

The dyeing can be best viewed from the East side of the Michigan Avenue bridge, the West side of the Columbus Drive bridge or upper and lower Wacker Drive between Michigan Avenue and Columbus Drive.

St. Patrick's Day Parade- 300 E. Balbo Drive

Scheduled for 12:00pm Saturday, March 17th 2012. Gear up for a festive event as the 57th annual parade takes place on the actual holiday. From the stepping off point at Columbus Drive and Balbo Avenue, the parade continues north along Columbus to Monroe Drive.

 

13 Mayıs 2012 Pazar

The 10 easiest ways to green your home

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Being earth-friendly doesn't require going solar or growing all your own food. There are plenty of easy ways to make a big difference.

When it comes to the environment, being a good global citizen starts at your doorstep. From recycling to using alternative cleaning materials, minor changes at home can add up to real benefits for the planet, not to mention your own health and happiness.
It may be a cliché, but the best way to be Earth-friendly is to cut down on what you consume and recycle whenever you can. The U.S. generates about 208 million tons of municipal solid waste a year, according to the National Institutes of Health. That's more than 4 pounds per person per day. Every little bit helps; recycling just one glass bottle saves enough electricity to light a 100-watt bulb for four hours.
Here are 10 more easy ways to green your home:
http://realestate.msn.com/article.aspx?cp-documentid=13107876

Fun Earth Facts

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Earth is referred to as the BLUE PLANET. WHY? Because from space, the oceans combined with our atmosphere make our planet look blue.
Earth is estimated to be 3-5 Billion Years old.
Earth is estimated to weigh 6,585,600,000,000,000,000,000 tons.
The area of the earth is almost 200 million square miles.
Earth travels through space at 66,700 miles per hour.
Earth's oceans are an average of 2 miles deep.
Earth's rotation on its axis makes a day at 24 hours...
Earth's orbit around the sun makes a year at nearly 365 and 1/2 days
Earth is tipped at 23 and 1/2 degrees in orbit. That axis is what causes our seasons.
Antarctica is the coldest place on earth. The continent is almost entirely covered in ICE !
Only 11 percent of the earth's surface is used to grow food.
Breeze carries about 100 Million tons of sand particles around the earth yearly.
That means if you live in America-you could have Sand that came from the Gobi desert in China.

HAPPY EARTH DAY!
 

Blue Man Group Postcard: New York City.

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The founders of the Blue Man Group, the long-running theatrical hit that features three mute guys with earless, sticky blue heads, homemade instruments and a lot of crepe paper, chose a wholly original second act. Every school day includes half an hour of "glow time," in which the shades are pulled, the black lights go on, and heretofore inconspicuous paintings and sculptures come to life.

A good (blue) man is hard to find

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You don't have to shave your head to be a Blue Man. You don't even need to be a man to be a Blue Man.

But you do need to attend Blue Man boot camp, an eight-week training course in New York where recruits learn to drum, spit paint and act without speaking a word.

"They have music sessions and character sessions; blocking sessions and a throwing and catching session," said Blue Man Group casting director Deb Burton. "Then there is the spin-painting session. That takes place in a room covered in plastic tarps."

The hours are long, the lessons difficult. Classes average three to six students and only about half graduate. The ones who do make the cut are dispatched to Blue Man Group theaters in seven cities across the globe or hit the road with the "How to be a Megastar Tour 2.1," which stops in St. Louis on Friday.

"Not everyone makes it," Burton said. "They can't quite grasp the character or maybe they can't wrap their head around the music. It does take a level of musicianship."

About 60 Blue Men perform worldwide. They all stand between 5-foot-10 and 6-foot-1 and maintain lean builds. One woman has performed as a Blue Man and more are welcome. However, Burton said few meet the physical requirements.

The Blue Man Group started nearly two decades ago in New York. Part party, part performance art, Blue Man Group shows feature drumming, physical stunts and paint splashing. Though the performers are interchangeable, each offers his own take on the quizzical Blue Man character.

"They bring their own vibe," Burton said. "It's very difficult though because we take away a lot of the tools actors are used to using, like dialogue."

The job does come with some occupational hazards, like spitting paint onto a blank canvas. That's one stunt no fan should try at home.

"There have been years and years of research and development," Burton said. "The paint is nontoxic but it tastes a bit funky."

The paint pellets are nothing compared to the latex skull caps a Blue Man must glue to his head.

"It takes an hour to put one on," Burton said. "They sweat a lot during a show so they have to use the glue. ... And taking it off is worse. It's like pulling off a Band-Aid."

Burton tries to make it up to her crew by allowing them to move among cities. "We try to accommodate their wishes," she said. "It's so hard to find a Blue Man."

Blue Man Group takes a look at megastars in its weekend show

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Rambunctious and unpredictable, the Blue Man Group will make a splash at the Qwest Center Omaha on Sunday.

The group's "How To Be a Megastar Tour" takes a tongue-in-cheek jab at arena rock shows.

The interactive show is a multimedia event that combines rock music, comedy, innovative video effects and satire.

While three bald and blue guys poke fun at rock stars who bob their heads and pump their fists, the six musicians and two vocalists in the group put on a rocking show that includes the group's new single "Rock and Go!" The irony is part of the fun.

"There's something in the show for everyone," said Michael Rahhal, one of three Blue Men coming to Omaha. "There are references to art, culture and Jungian psychology, traditional vaudeville and blowing things up. Kids enjoy the colored lights, the strobe lights and the comedy."

And then there are those iconic blue heads and hands.

"There is an emotional ambiguity about the Blue Man," Rahhal said in a phone interview from Cleveland. "You can't pigeonhole him as a certain character."

The Blue Man has the deadpan look of comic actor Buster Keaton, Rahhal said, with characteristics based on Superman, Gene Simmons of the band Kiss and physicist Albert Einstein.

Rahhal, a 34-year-old native of Ardmore, Okla., has a master's degree in acting from the National Theater Conservatory in Denver and has been performing with the Blue Man Group for 10 years. In addition to acting, his Blue Man role includes playing drums and an instrument made of PVC pipe and called a Tubulum.

The Blue Man Group's penchant for splashing blue paint adds a sense of danger to the show, Rahhal said. The band provides ponchos to guests who sit close enough to get splashed.

But don't worry too much, he said.

"It's (egg-based) water-soluble paint: environmentally friendly, health friendly and totally benign," he said. "Basically, it's just colored water."

More blue news

The playful Blue Man theme spills over into other entertainment:

Blue Man Group has produced musical scores for the television shows "Scrubs" and "Arrested Development."

The "Audio" CD, nominated for a Grammy, is one of the group's three albums.

The DVD "The Complex Rock Tour Live" has live concert footage and three music videos.

Out of the Blue: Talented musicians color outside of the lines

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Kermit the Frog lamented that it's not easy being green. Maybe he should have been blue.

Mark Frankel of Blue Man Group says it's pretty cool being that shade of the rainbow: shiny, neon, cobalt blue.

"It's sort of a neutral (color). If it was red, we'd be angry; green, we'd be aliens," explained Frankel, 33. "Standing sometimes in front of 10,000 people, it's an intense moment of 'wow' and you let it run through you."

Frankel is one of three performers in the U.S. touring group, known worldwide for their blue heads and hands, wide-eyed demeanor and the ability to really bang a drum. Or PVC pipe. Or a piano sitting on end.

Blue Man Group comes to the Scottrade Center in St. Louis on April 4 for a single performance of the How to Be A Megastar Tour 2.1.

If you've never seen Blue Man Group, maybe it's best to start with what they're not: They don't have names or characters. They don't speak on stage. They don't emote (except with their eyes). They don't have ears (covered by a laxtex cap). They don't sing.

During the show, all Blue Men are innocents in identical baggy dark clothing. They behave as though they've been dropped onto a stage, unaware that an audience awaits them.

"We're not human beings, but we're attracted to them," explained Frankel, adding that not having ears is "a subtle change that affects the audience."

Part of BMG's goal is to make a connection with those humans surrounding them, "carrying them away" into the experience.

"You have to perform in a way that looks real. Honest. ... It's a great limitation, trying to convey emotion with the eyes."

And, as serious as that sounds, they make merry with a message: Three percussionists exuberantly beating drums that spray paint in all directions -- causing a warning about what to wear when your seat is in the "poncho section" near the front of the stage.

They use mallets to wack away with all their might on big pieces of PVC pipe, as well as on the strings of a lidless piano that has been turned on end -- all to produce incredible sounds.

"We're not efficient," Frankel deadpanned about how Blue Men drum. "We're using mallets the size of bowling balls! ... It's a wholly different style from the traditional drumming I did, where I backed up a band and played in cabarets. Here, the drums are at the lip of the stage. It's an Eastern style of drumming. Loud. I'm playing as loud as I can."

Reviewers have described the show as performance art meets carnival meets comedy meets some seriously cool music.

Trial by fire

Frankel has been a Blue Man for 3 1/2 years. He grew up a drummer in a family of professional musicians and actors in New York. He was working as a drummer when he tried out during an open Blue Man Group audition.

Requirements include being not just a drummer and/or performer, but about 6-foot tall and physically fit. All Blue Men should have a look that is very similar, so no one stands apart, said Frankel.

And yes, he said, there has been one female Blue Man, who no longer performs.

When first hired, potential Blue Men train for a total of six months, two of them in the studio learning instruments and routines.

Then they put you on stage, Frankel said.

"It's a trial by fire, a collective effort." The company may move cast members around until the best combination of three men is found for a show.

"It has to be the right fit."

Before a performance, Frankel spends about an hour turning himself into one of the enigmatic cobalt characters: slipping on a wireless monitor and/or ear plugs (depending on the size of the venue), then stretching a latex bald cap over his head and ears. That's followed by applying the special grease paint, which never dries, thereby maintaining its shininess throughout a show.

The cap keeps the paint out of his ears, but the rest comes off pretty easily with mineral oil, he said, though he doesn't always work hard at complete removal.

"Well, if you've got a show the next night ..."

Three for the show

In Megastar Tour 2.1, all the fun -- and a good bit of satire -- centers around finding fame and fortune as a rock star. An unseen narrator offers lessons from the "Rock Concert Instruction Manual." The three blue guys are joined by an eight-piece backup band, which triggers a step-by-step, song-by-song, celebratory lesson that evolves into a real rock concert. Bonus: Rock stardom gets skewered big time.

The audience gets into the act as well, learning along the way to do head bobs, hip rolls, punch fists skyward, even hold cell phones in the air like the cigarette lighters of bygone rock fans.

For diehard fans who return again and again to see Blue Man Group, pieces of their signature act remain, including throwing an absurd number of marshmallows into each other's mouths.

New on the Megastar Tour 2.1 are state-of-the-art video screens, new vocalists and the tour debut of the hit single "Rock and Go!"

San Francisco-based multimedia artist Mike Relm opens the shows with a mix of spins, scratches, music and video clips in a mash-up of pop culture.

Launched in 1987 in New York by three theater buddies -- Matt Goldman, Phil Stanton and Chris Wink -- Blue Man Group revolutionized the concepts of mime and interactive theater.

Today, Blue Man Group business is big. Besides the tour, stage productions have been running -- in some cases for more than a decade -- in Boston, Las Vegas, Chicago, New York, Orlando, Berlin, Stuttgart, Oberhausen and Tokyo.

There are 50 to 60 Blue Men globally. Frankel is overjoyed to be one of them and plans to stay blue "as long as I can." Touring since January, he has performed almost nightly in a different city. Megastar Tour 2.1 ends in May.

Speaking Thursday from Huntsville, Ala., he said choosing a favorite color to wear when not on stage isn't a high priority while on the road.