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ap photo via seattlepi.com
geeknuz.com
from 'fantomaster' at flickr.com
The first Washington governor of my lifetime could also be considered the state’s first “modern era” leader.
At a time of postwar complacency, just after the fading of “red scare” smear campaigns (yes, there were McCarthy-esque witch hunters here too), Rosellini enacted a bold progressive agenda.
He backed the Seattle World’s Fair.
He helped organize the cleanup of Lake Washington, once a mightily polluted body. He boosted college funding.
He established a separate juvenile justice system, and improved horrendous conditions at adult prisons and mental hospitals.
He boosted economic development and infrastructure investment, including the SR 520 bridge that now bears his name.
And yeah, he also stayed lifelong allies with the likes of strip-club maven Frank Colacurcio Sr., which eventually led to the ex-governor’s last, less-than-positive headlines in the 1990s.
You can disapprove of the Colacurcio connection and still admire Rosellini’s steadfastness to longtime friendships.
And you can look at the whole of Rosellini’s works and see a man who did all he could for what he believed in, even if it cost him most of his political capital before his first gubernatorial term was up.
Would there were more like him today.
Music scene tie in: Gov. Rosellini’s press secretary was Calvin Johnson Sr., father of the K Records swami.
from geekgirlworld.com
…you could give free money to everyone else assuming some of that money would be deposited in banks and/or used to pay down debt owed to those banks.
fanpop.com
first cover of macworld (1984), via kuodesign.com
To quote a film he financed, Steve Jobs has now gone to infinity and beyond.
As we mentioned six weeks ago when he announced his official retirement from Apple, Jobs and partner Steve Wozniak weren’t the only guys in the mid ’70s to think of building small computers around those newfangled microprocessor chips.
There had been, and would have continued to be, microcomputers for avid programming mavens, and microcoputers for grunt number-crunching in business.
But Jobs and his crew had bigger dreams.
I’m writing this while watching Rachel Maddow’s reminiscence about Jobs’s first defining moment on a mass stage, the debut of the original Macintosh:
That was revolutionary. Personal computing for persons; for people who didn’t know from computers. It was the first real breach of the distance between the immense power of computing and regular people’s ability to act on that power.
When Jobs returned to Apple in 1996 from an eleven-year exile, he took this concept to newer levels. His company created entire product categories, even entire industries.
Many people have taken many lessons from Jobs’s life and work.
What would I add in?
Just one of his more enduring slogans.
“Think Different.”
Don’t settle for conformity, or even for conformist nonconformity.
Mix-and-match artistic disciplines, business models, cultural influences, technical pathways, creative procedures, and philosophical visions.
Put everything in the pot.
Keep stirring.
denny hall, the uw campus's oldest building
satirical ad by leah l. burton, godsownparty.com
linda thomas, kiro-fm
If someone doesn’t drive, you would not call that person a driver.
If someone doesn’t dance, you would not call that person a dancer.
If someone doesn’t design buildings, you would not call that person an architect.
So why are the right-wing-only media calling corporations and billionaires “job creators”?
lpcoverlover.com
wash. state dept. of transportation
Twenty years ago this week, Seattle unleashed three monumental media products upon the world: Nirvana’s Nevermind, Pearl Jam’s Ten, and the first issue of The Stranger.
Hard to believe, but in what turned out to be the final years before the World Wide Web became a universal thing, when online media still meant pay-by-the-minute AOL and CompuServe, was born what may have turned out to be Seattle’s next-to-last important newsprint periodical (Real Change is a few years younger).
This week’s Stranger makes note of the 20th anniversary of a monumental media product. And the anniversary it makes of is not that of its own debut.
Mark your calendars.
I’ve got another live book event on Thursday, Oct. 13, 7:30 p.m., at The Couth Buzzard Books and Espresso Buono Cafe, 8310 Greenwood Ave. N.
And there will be another new book by me debuting at this event.
More details shortly.