I ♥ Jason Schwartzman
I'm kind of bummed to miss Bored to Death on HBO. It wasn't even that great but I loved seeing Zach Grkjdsfshgjk and Jason Schwartzman.
It takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else you must run twice as fast. - The Queen from Through the Looking Glass
This cult of fun is driven by three of the most popular management fads of the moment: empowerment, engagement and creativity. Many companies pride themselves on devolving power to front-line workers. But surveys show that only 20% of workers are “fully engaged with their job”. Even fewer are creative. Managers hope that “fun” will magically make workers more engaged and creative. But the problem is that as soon as fun becomes part of a corporate strategy it ceases to be fun and becomes its opposite—at best an empty shell and at worst a tiresome imposition.Part of this whole "fun" phenomenon is that many people have forgotten how to be a adults, another form of the prolonged adolescents syndrome. Look, I like acting goofy and being in touch with my inner child...just not at work. Give me a cocktail in the afternoon and the expectation that I work with other adults and suddenly work won't be so
The most unpleasant thing about the fashion for fun is that it is mixed with a large dose of coercion. Companies such as Zappos don’t merely celebrate wackiness. They more or less require it. Compulsory fun is nearly always cringe-making. Twitter calls its office a “Twoffice”. Boston Pizza encourages workers to send “golden bananas” to colleagues who are “having fun while being the best”. Behind the “fun” façade there often lurks some crude management thinking: a desire to brand the company as better than its rivals, or a plan to boost productivity through team-building. Twitter even boasts that it has “worked hard to create an environment that spawns productivity and happiness”.
In the weeks leading up to the anniversary, the media had been sanctimoniously lecturing Americans that their sensitivities regarding Ground Zero were irrelevant in the face of a Muslim desire to put up a massive and completely unnecessary Islamic complex in the area. Constitutional freedoms, real or imagined, trumped any sensitivities. But when a Gainesville pastor proposed returning a couple of copies of the Koran back to the environment by way of lighter fluid, suddenly freedom of speech and freedom of religion, and all that other stuff created by dead white men before the age of Walter Kronkite and CNN, were irrelevant in face of Muslim sensitivities.By the way I don't give a shit about the center being built two blocks near Ground Zero. Do I think it's distasteful and wrong for someone who proclaims to want to "build bridges" and then do something that offends a whole lot of people? Yup. But there is nothing I can do about it because it's their right as Americans, no matter how much I disagree with them, to do so. But so is the right of this idiot pastor to burn those books. Do I disagree with him and find it insulting and stupid? Yup. But just like the Mosque being build in NYC, that is his right as an American, to be offensive as he wants and exercise his religious freedom. And no it's not like Kristalnacht, last time I checked he is not going into Mosques, and burning their Korans and the US government is not sponsoring the burning. Ugh.