Saturday, May 24, 2008

Cable TV costs are actually rising!

The NY Times reports that cable TV costs have risen dramatically over the past decade.

My favorite fact from the article:

"Cable customers, who typically pay at least $60 a month, watch only a fraction of what they pay for — on average, a mere 13 percent of the 118 channels available to them. And the number of subscribers keeps growing."

Saturday, May 10, 2008

The State of American Bookselling, or: Nerds Make Books Look Bad

I walked into the Boulder Barnes & Noble today to be greeted by the embodiment of American bookselling: The Colorado Recorder Orchestra and approximately zero audience members.
Assembled amongst the greeting cards and Moleskine notebooks, just feet from the magazine racks, the Colorado Recorder Orchestra was tooting away with all the halting grace that only a recorder can manage. While the Orchestra was musically more proficient than, say, a 2nd grade music class, I must say that middle-age does not make the recorder, as an instrument, any cooler.

I stifled my guffaws as the Orchestra introduced each "Rennaissance instrument", tootling about to give samples of each instrument's voice. It's moments like those that make me wish I had a video-capable cell phone.
Toot toot!
[publishing]

Friday, May 9, 2008

For Overall Performance, 3 Sports Is Better Than 1

Gina Kolata, fitness writer for the New York Times, posted an article yesterday in which she argues that peak performance in more than one sport is not possible for triathletes. And the tone of her article suggests that it may not be possible for triathletes to peak in any of their three sports.

Kolata's interviewees acknowledge a few of triathlon's benefits: the variety is fun and avoids single-sport repetitive stress injuries, three sports allow athletes to compensate for weaknesses in one area with strengths in another, but as the voice of the article, Kolata focuses on perceived negatives, all based on a sense that peak performance in one sport is more desirable than lesser performance in three.

A more interesting article might have asked: Is it better to be fast at three sports or fastest at one?

But Kolata's argument is elementary and counter to the entire spirit and point of the sport of triathlon. Multisport athletes are unlikely to rival their single-sport counterparts because they are spreading their training time over three sports. This is the nature of the sport.

Triathletes should not be the best swimmers, the best cyclists, or the best runners. Triathletes should be the best at doing all three consecutively. You see, Gina, triathlon is more than three sports put together. Triathlon is its own sport. Triathletes do not compete against the best swimmers, the best cyclists, or the best runners. Triathletes compete against other triathletes. The goal of triathlon is to be a well rounded endurance athlete. The goal is to be fastest at all three sports, collectively. Triathlon's three-sport format is the great equalizer; Lance Armstrong may win 7 consecutive Tours de France, but he may never win a single Ironman (unless he can work on that marathon time). Lance's focus on cycling makes him a great cyclist, but not such a great triathlete. Triathlon's sponsors reward single-sport performance, but the sport reserves its greatest rewards for the fastest triathletes.