Schreiner’s Media Landscape

September 9, 2010

Traffic Fatalities Lowest in 60 Years; Thank Car Companies and Big Government

Filed under: America, dualism, media, sprawl — Ken Schreiner @ 10:08 am

People complain about lots of different things but one thing everyone complains about is other people’s driving. So it should come as a shock to all the traffic whiners (if you hate driving so much, why are you doing it?) that fatalities in crashes were lower in 2009 than in 1950. That’s right. More vehicles, more accidents, more cell phones and texting, fewer fatalities.

Because people also like to complain about auto companies and big government, here’s the rest of the story (thanks Paul Harvey GRHS). If it wasn’t for the vigilance of the federal agencies overseeing highway safety and the continuous improvement of safety components i.e. seat belts, air bags, roll bars, etc. by the auto industry, the number of dead people on our roads would be at least twice what it is.

At a time when all most Americans want to do is bash car makers, industry, government, media and anyone else whom we depend upon for our safe and luxurious lifestyles, this should be a reminder. Life is not nearly as bad as you might believe. And without the efforts of designers, manufacturers, investigators, and regulators, it sure could be a lot worse.

August 20, 2010

The McMansion: RIP

Filed under: America, conservation, sprawl — Ken Schreiner @ 5:47 pm

More articles are mourning the death of the so-called McMansion: a 3,200 sq. ft. or larger suburban home built in the 1990s and later. But while you can declare a concept dead, it’s not so easy with the zillions of over-sized, steroid-ridden monstrosities that will still be standing- many of them empty- for decades to come. Here’s an idea: entire subdivisions made up of bed-and-breakfasts.

August 16, 2010

Digital Diddling vs. Natural Noodling; Studying How Nature and Technology Change Our Brains

“Music has charms to soothe the savage breast” is what playwright William Congreve wrote in 1697. But what do cell phones, computers, video games, and other techno-distractors do to us and can Nature reverse the ill effects of technomania or the “heartache and thousand natural shocks that flesh is heir to” that Shakespeare’s Hamlet whined about?

For this answer, we turn from post-Enlightenment dramatists to 20th century folk comics. “Five neuroscientists are in a raft going down the San Juan River” the joke starts. But it’s not a joke- at least there’s no punch line yet. These brainiacs have come to Utah to literally float away from modern life for a while and hopefully find out how neurotic our Blackberrys, Xboxes, and iPods make us. Simultaneously, they hope to find out if getting away from these things and, more specifically, into un-technofied natural areas or wilderness heal the wounds.

Similar studies have been done on the negative effects of modernism and the positive effects of Nature on children like Richard Louv’s famous “Last Child in the Woods.” I can say from personal experience that getting away from my computers, phone, TV and other gadgetry not only calms me down but engages me in life on Earth on a level that’s impossible from in front of a glowing screen or the wheel of a dangerous, moving vehicle.

I wish the professors luck. More than that, I hope they have a great time here in Utah. I know I do.

August 4, 2010

Obesity Epidemic Grows, Outdoor Activity Shrinks; Nature is Not “Cool”- It’s Everything

“What’s the purpose in going hiking? You just go up a mountain and then down.”

Logan resident Evelin Cornejo, 17

Utah is one of the best places for outdoor and Nature recreation. It’s the major reason I moved here. As a probable result, Utah is fifth among states with the thinnest Americans (it sure isn’t because people refuse funeral potatoes or In-and-Out Burgers). Still, it’’s difficult to get young people here interested in recreating outside- even getting them outside.  So in an attempt to pry kids away from their computers, video games, and TVs, the federal government held a meeting of a bunch of them the other day to talk about how to make Nature “cooler”.

I despise the word “cool” to describe anything. It’s a hackneyed 1950s cliche with socialist (gasp!) origins, implying that the people who use it are the only true judges of what it is. Young people have never been and never will be the true judges of what is “cool” because they don’t know much about anything at that age. “Coolness” is about status, being accepted, and rebellion. It’s one of the reasons obesity in this country continues to increase alarmingly among young people and all age groups. If “cool” means the popular and socially correct thing, most Americans, including young people, apparently think being fat, out of shape, and unhealthy is “cool”.

I applaud the feds’ efforts to stop the worsening obesity epidemic by encouraging kids to get outdoors, exercise, stop eating junk food, etc. But trying to make them believe Nature is “cool” is encouraging them to lie to themselves. Nature is not “cool”, fashionable, a commodity like a soft drink, nor an institution like work, school or church. Nature is essential. More essential than all of us and all our “cool” stuff. What schools, parents, the corporate media, and society need to teach kids is that Nature is the source of EVERYTHING, that we are a part of it, and that we distance and detach ourselves from Nature’s dominion at our peril. We deny or destroy Nature, we deny or destroy ourselves.

That includes being fat, out of shape, and really, really, RE-HEE-EALLY stupid (apologies to Dr. Perry Cox). This is how we get oil spills, human sprawl, gridlock, depression, obesity, air and water pollution, asthma, cancer, and every other societal ill we mindlessly and endlessly inflict upon ourselves. And if we continue to try and make Nature SEEM “cool”, we demean it and lower it to the status of clothes, TV shows, Emma’s new boyfriend, and Justin’s iPhone.

That’s not “cool.”

July 30, 2010

Park City the Most Bike Friendly in America?

Filed under: Nature, Utah, conservation, sports, sprawl, wildlife — Ken Schreiner @ 2:41 pm

Sorry for the glowing post about riding the Rail Trail the other day. Abbie lost two tires and I lost one to numerous stickers and thorns we rode over in one small portion of the path. We didn’t hear the tires blow. They just ultimately went flat- Abbie’s before mine. I didn’t have nearly enough material to fix them all myself. So the good folks at Jans in Park City fixed them all in about 15 minutes at a cost of $30. They’re the best.

Which brings me to Park City being the best place in America if you’re a bicycle lover. There are more bike trails, more bike stores, more bicyclists, and more bike-friendly motorists in Park City than anywhere. Of course, you have to watch out for the tourists who drive around here. They’re not nearly as bike-friendly and don’t usually know where they’re going so you still need to be careful out there.

One of our favorite places to ride is around the Swaner Wetlands Preserve (pic left) on the north side near I-80. Lots of birds, animals, and new homes, stores, restaurants and other stuff popping up around the old Olympic Village from the 2002 Winter Games. Fortunately, Park City is at least slightly environmentally enlightened so the developments are not horribly damaging to the delicate wetland ecosystem. And whether you like street biking, mountain biking, or just tooling around, Park City is the perfect place to knock the rust off those wheels.

July 23, 2010

Netflix to Stream First-Run Features; Environmental Revolution Means Less Junk Around the House, More on Our Screens

I’ve ordered movies from Netflix for a year now since we bought our Samsung Blu-ray player (pic below right). But I haven’t ordered a single DVD. The Blu-ray comes with an ethernet jack where I connect to my router. It came with video distributor apps like Netflix, Blockbuster, YouTube (I watch my YT videos on our HD) and even the music service Pandora. When we want to watch a film from Netflix, we order it on our phone or laptop, and in the seconds in takes to download, it streams through our Blu-ray on to HDTV. Nice.

Streaming on personal computers, phones and TVs has become so popular that Netflix has struck a deal with Hollywood studios to release first-run movies for streaming. The quality is good (not all movies are in HD), selection is growing, price is competitive, and it’s great environmentally because you don’t have to drive to a store nor get a plastic disc shipped to you via a big, polluting airplane in an expensive, pretty cardboard package.

For a couple years now my clients haven’t requested DVDs with their video files on them as much. They instead want them uploaded to their FTP sites where they retrieve them. Same quality but a lot faster, cheaper, and less polluting form of delivery. That same concept is behind the streaming revolution that will ultimately make most DVDs obsolete and maybe even end the blight of those large, obnoxious mega-super cinemaplexes that have destroyed more than one rural wetland.

I was never a fan of DVDs though they were a huge advancement over film reels and cassettes. After a century of transitional formats, we may have finally come to the end of the portable, disposable media storage era. It will mean a lot more junk on our screens but, more important, less junk in our homes, air, and landfills. Now that’s a REALLY huge advancement.

July 19, 2010

China Now World’s Biggest Energy Hog; Is America Losing- or Learning?

The U.S. is still by far the biggest energy consumer per capita, with the average American burning five times as much energy annually as the average Chinese citizen…”

- Fatih Birol, chief economist, International Energy Agency

There was a time a hundred years ago when being the biggest consumer of energy was considered good. No, not just good. The best. That’s when the United States surpassed England as the preeminent world economic power. Now China has done it to the USA. It was only a matter of time.

Energy for manufacturing and commerce has previously been more important than energy for simply living. China is now the leading manufacturing nation so it stands to reason it would use more energy. But with humans having more spare time on their hands, and manufacturing becoming more efficient, it follows that China- the most populous nation on the planet- would surpass everybody in energy use because they simply have more people. Computers, TVs, video games, iPhones, cars, lawn mowers, air conditioners and furnaces. All these things require using utility-provided energy. And in case you hadn’t noticed, gas is not 29 cents a gallon anymore.

However, statistics from the International Energy Agency show Americans use FIVE TIMES as much energy as the average Chinese citizen. With China’s hard times still visible in the rearview mirror, their people have not become as lazy, stupid, and wasteful as Americans are. Hey, it took us 100 years to get that way. Given China’s rapid growth, you’d think they’d catch up to us pretty soon. But as consumer products become more and more energy efficient, the chances of that happening look pretty dim- kind of like the lights of New York City on a hot, summer day.

Does this spell doom for the USA as the world’s leading country, as it did with Great Britain at the turn of the 20th century? Happily, no. Conservation has always been an evasive characteristic of a powerful nation. Wealth leads to waste. Luxury largesse. Now, because of dwindling resources and a poor economy, Americans are being forced to conserve as we did  during World War 2. The Chinese will soon find out after exhausting their seemingly inexhaustible supplies of fossil fuels, they must make hard choices. Hopefully, they will learn from America’s bad example and choose conservation now to avert the energy crisis the USA is now in the grips of.

America’s energy crisis has resulted in more conservation. But it has not spurred competitive development of renewable energy resources as it has in China, Germany, Japan, Spain and virtually every other country. The good news is America is finally stopping the insane, profligate use of fossil fuels to power and pollute our country and planet. But the new champions of insane, profligate energy use- China, India, Brazil- have already put in place industry and residential incentives for renewable energy development and use anticipating the problem that has crippled America due to its continuing dependence on oil and coal, failure to plan for the ultimate exhaustion of those supplies, and the damage they ironically cause its economy and inhabitants.

That puts China and the rest even farther ahead of the USA. And that- as they say in Beijing- is the bad news.

April 16, 2010

Earth Day 2010: Iceland Volcano, Utah & Tibet Quakes Remind Us- We Are Not in Charge Here

Filed under: China, Earth, Environment, God, Iceland, Nature, Tibet, Utah, conservation, dualism, sprawl, weather — Ken Schreiner @ 8:43 am

Just as humans invented God, we also appointed ourselves in charge of everything including the planet on which we tenuously exist. Certainly, stewardship of Earth is a concept that makes a lot more sense than the previous one of ravaging our island home to exhaustion. But ownership of the Earth, as currently practiced by the human race, is quite a different concept. And as Earth as shown since the day it was formed, you can steward it all you want. But  it cannot be owned.

So it is that a comparatively small volcano on a rocky mass in the north Atlantic has brought an entire continent’s air travel industry to a near-standstill. As flights struggle to run out of Europe due to the cloud of ash floating from the eruption under the Eyjafjallajokull glacier, we are forced to remember that Earth is a living, breathing, and ever-changing planet. It does what it does and every step, every move we “living things” make on it is at our peril.

Earthquakes great and small- from Tibet’s latest killer to Utah’s jostler yesterday-  are also ways the Earth gently or not so reminds us who’s boss. Just read the USGS’ web site of earthquakes TODAY. It’s always been this way and probably always will be. As time has shown, the only thing humans can do to affect the Earth’s natural functions is make them worse. It takes a lot of human effort, ingenuity and self-respect, just to keep it from destroying us.

And the Earth as a living thing, by all evidence, has both the right and capability to do it.

March 19, 2010

Breaking Irony: Water Pumping Causes Huge Fissures; Private Greed Again Leads to Government Intervention

Filed under: Earth, Environment, Nature, Oil, Sierra Club, Utah, conservation, farm, mining, sprawl, water — Ken Schreiner @ 8:05 am

Someday in America, water will become a more precious substance than oil. In many parts of the world, it already is. Here in Utah, we’re finding out now what many places in the west, Arizona and Nevada among them, already know: humans’ growing thirst is causing the Earth to literally fall out from under them. It’s similar to the problems caused by mining, oil drilling, mangrove uprooting and other human, Earth-moving activities.

Excessive pumping for agriculture and other human uses has caused a two-mile stretch of the Cedar Valley in southwest Utah to fall 100 feet in 70 years. The fissure has grown so big so fast that it’s causing the sewage in a nearby subdivision to flow backwards. State authorities are telling farmers, ranchers and land developers to cut back. But don’t expect that to happen. The human behavioral pattern regarding our planet is to use and abuse it until the resources are gone or the land is irretrievably damaged and things collapse, people die, and government is called in to clean up the mess.

As Pete Seeger wrote, “When will we ever learn?”

March 5, 2010

Chicago Blackhawks Memories Spark My Interest in Hockey Anew

Filed under: sprawl — Ken Schreiner @ 10:21 am

hawksI’m going to my first Chicago Blackhawks hockey game since the late 1970s tonight. A lot of things have changed since then. First, the old Chicago Stadium where I watched them play is long gone. The United Center- the House That Jordan Built- is where they play across the street from where the old Stadium loomed and what is now a parking lot.

My old heroes- Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita, Whitey Stapleton, Tony Esposito are also long gone. The new guys- Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews, Marion Hossa- are just names to me. I hear they’re good. The Hawks are so good for the first time in decades they’re favorites to win the Stanley Cup which they haven’t done since 1961 when I was seven years old. I’ll believe it when I see it.

I haven’t followed the NHL for years but I know there was a strike, a few franchise moves, and that no Canadian team has won the championship since Wayne  Gretzky in the 1980s led the Edmonton Oilers. I actually continued playing hockey into the ’80s when I worked in Denver. I was a defenseman on a media team that played some long-gone NHL veterans at long-gone McNichols Arena before a long-gone Colorado Rockies game (they moved and became the Stanley Cup-champion New Jersey Devils).

I’m looking forward to tonight’s game against Vancouver.  Combined with the exciting games between the US and Canada in the Olympics, I’m curious about hockey again, just like I was nearly fifty years ago as a kid skating down at the reservoir all winter, playing pickup games and wearing my white, extra small Blackhawks jersey.

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