- 2007: Beware the Halloween bogeyman!
- 2008: Pendulum swing on Halloween hype? (an erroneous prediction)
- 2009: Halloween "security theater" endures
- 2010: Yet another year of (yawn) Halloween security theater
View from my walking path of San Francisco Bay and Golden Gate Bridge |
Collating these Halloween posts reminds me that I’ve been blogging for almost five years now. It's hard for me to believe this will be my 735th post! My increasingly large and diverse international subscriber base makes quitting unthinkable. But occasionally blogging must take a back seat to other things, including my forensic work, academic writing, non-professional activities, and even simply enjoying our glorious October weather (so much nicer than the record-breaking snow storm that just struck the East Coast!).
I did manage to find time to view and review three indie films, a diversion from the increasingly mindless Hollywood fare that is so hard to stomach. You can click on any of these links to read the full review. In order from most to least recommended, they are:
- Salt of This Sea (a Palestinian film I highly recommend)
- Incendies (a critically acclaimed film about the Lebanese conflict, which is worth seeing if you are into horror)
- Ballast (a film set in the Mississippi Delta that doesn’t live up to the hype)
- Juvenile curfews as prejudice: Great editorial on why we need more kids on the streets, not fewer (San Francisco Chronicle)
- Teenage brains: Nice feature in this month's National Geographic
- Obesity playing increasingly common role in child custody battles, as ex-spouses hurl accusations in court about their kids' nutrition and exercise (Wall Street Journal)
- Boy Scouts' "perversion files" of 5,000+ pedophiles; like Catholic Church, Scouts kept abuse secret (USA Today)
- Man who borrowed a cell phone to tell his family he was paroling gets extra 5 years in prison (Los Angeles Times)
- Gizmodo series: Life and technology in San Quentin (Be grateful for the things you take for granted!)
- The Invisible Man: How the sex offender registry results in social death (online article)
- Turning conventional wisdom on its head: A successful executive's struggles with severe mental disorder (New York Times)
- Food rationing in Texas prisons; weekend lunches eliminated (Grits for Breakfast blog)
- Book review: "A Plague of Prisons" – why U.S. incarceration boom is social catastrophe on scale of worst global epidemics
- Sybil Exposed: The extraordinary story behind the famous multiple personality case (New York Times book review)
- Topeka Kansas repeals local domestic violence law due to budget cuts; agencies won't accept new cases
- California governor approves bill speeding involuntary medication of incompetent defendants held in state hospitals (Los Angeles Times)
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