NBC and Jay Leno

Gabriel had a thoughtful post about Jay Leno, comparing his programming to NPR and classical music over the past couple decades. I’m much more sympathetic to Grant McCracken’s view of Leno as a failure because he misses the contemporary moment’s desire for specificity and instead provides the blandest of something-for-everyone variety. Though McCracken and Rossman are not quite speaking to each other here, to be sure.

Now I read that NBC is about to get swallowed by Comcast, and I think it’s a matter of time before we see the tick-tock of Leno’s contribution to this overall state of the media world. For what it’s worth, I think Leno is truly, truly bad, both an unabashed corporate sellout shill and a terrible interviewer to boot.

Visualizing data, movie edition

Ok, this is impressive. And I’ve seen Primer three times and still don’t 100% have the timeline worked out.

Go bag

It’s that time of year again, when I first got freaked out about emergency preparedness by watching 28 Days Later. And it’s the time when I review and renew my emergency go kit. For peace of mind, this is the fanny pack that you can walk out of your house in 10 seconds with. It comes from Jim Macdonald’s post over at Making Light. He also has pages for other kinds of emergencies, including a highly useful flu kit.

In any case, enjoy, and hopefully you’ll never need it: Emergency Go Bag Inventory

on the right side of history

what to do when a smart person says a crazy thing?

One of the founders of string theory in physics made the case this week that the Large Hadron Collider will fail to produce/discover the Higgs boson because its very existence is so abhorrent to nature that the attempt to create it sabotages itself.

The upshot is that we can expect seemingly strange delays and chronic problems to plague CERN interminably. This has to be one of the better physics theory in the world today, frankly. Perhaps there is a similar explanation for why I can never find the elusive Skinny Cow Cookies-N-Cream flavored ice cream sandwiches..their deliciousness is so antithetical to nature that somehow it’s rippling backwards through time.

The state of the economy

I haven’t said much lately about the financial crisis. Perhaps I’m gun-shy after predicting that my own bank Citi would not survive the year. But mostly it’s because I find the whole topic depressing, both professionally and personally.

Here are some of the things I’m looking at. Let’s start with the finance side, that is, where banks and other lending institutions might be extending credit or risking capital to promote economic growth.

Well….venture capital has been pretty miserable.
nvca-vc_2
Levels of funding for venture capital are about at the levels seen just past the dot-com bust of 2001. So not much is going on there.

And the more traditional banking sector?

Well, the federal funds rate, which is the baseline rate at which banks can borrow from the US government remains at 0 to .25%. That is, banks can borrow money from the federal government pretty much for free. For free!

And how are banks responding? By tightening or leaving unchanged their willingness and standards for lending. That is, banks can borrow money for free and are not willing to lend it out to anyone but their most risk-free clients. What does this mean? It means that banks are collectively still massively worried about the losses and their ability to operate.

And they should be! The top tier of housing markets are now accounting for 30% of all foreclosures – it’s not all poor people with subprime credit loans. In fact, there is a fresh wave of foreclosures and financial losses linked to housing coming up around the corner. A set of loans known as option ARMs, or ‘pick-a-pay’ loans, whereby you pick the amount you will pay per month, deferring the principal payments down the road. The resets on these loans are, frankly, scary as hell:
option ARMs

Many people with these loans are going to see their monthly payments jump significantly right about….now. And since the real estate market as a whole has slumped, the homes are worth much less than the mortgages. How bad will this get? Well, Wells Fargo sees 60-70% loss severity on option ARMs. Pretty scary stuff.

In fact, delinquency rates on not just housing, but all forms of credit are pretty scary. In the most recent quarter: 8.8% of residential real estate loans are 30+ days delinquent; as are 6.7% of loans via credit card.

I’m not including the employment picture (awful); nor am I looking at the long-term fiscal state of, well, the State (awful). And of course, things can change pretty dramatically.

But I would say this:

  1. If you are a bank and can figure out how to suss out the people who will pay you back from the people who can not, you should be making a gigantic boat-load of money right now
  2. If you are looking to purchase a house, and are sitting on cash, you could buy now, but you don’t have to be in a hurry. There is no sensible reason to believe that things are going anywhere but sideways for the next year at least
  3. Banks are on the brink. Still. And any ‘profits’ or ‘bonuses’ that they report are due almost exclusively to the fact that money costs them zero. Or, in some cases, because they are the last players standing in what are now less competitive markets (for, say, Government bond brokerage)
  4. Lots of people are hurting, and they are likely going to hurt worse. If this recession has not affected you or someone in your immediate family, it probably will soon.

So, now you know why I’m not saying much about all this.

game night?

Shouldn’t there be some kind of Mario Kart sociology meetup again sometime soon? It feels like it’s been a really long time…Let’s get a move on, Scatterplot!

more nudging

Here is another one from the series of Volkswagon’s ‘fun theory’ design projects, this one a bottomless garbage can to induce people to throw away trash:

The whole shebang is worth noting, for its effects on behavior and its bigger-issue demonstration of the contextualization of rationality. Plus, honestly, it’s a fun video. I don’t know that I’d like all my trash bins singing at me, but I’m trying to imagine how this might work for a classroom, or for finance, etc. Obviously, this is a field that has been trodden upon before.

the inducements of rationality

Economic sociologists have long wrestled with the microfoundations of market rationality, and attempted to understand the embeddedness of behavior in the cultural context in which it rests…oh, hell, I just want to post this video of the subway stairs in Stockholm:

Have a nice Friday, peoples!

Brainstorm away

Happy brain stretching!