Friday, August 30, 2024

Movie Review: Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire (2024)

Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire (2024) co-written and directed by Gil Kenan

The Spengler family has moved to New York City and taken over the old fire house where the original Ghostbusters first opened shop. They take up busting ghosts as a family, though they haven't worked out all the family dynamics since Gary (Paul Rudd) is a step-father to Trevor (Finn Wolfhard) and Phoebe (Mckenna Grace). He wants to be the cool friend (he's their former high school science teacher) but mom Callie (Carrie Coon) could really use another adult in the family. Their day job gets complicated when Ray (Dan Aykroyd) buys an ancient orb that, as viewers have seen in the opening scene from 1904, is a prison for some sort of ice demon (of course it accidentally opens). Another problem--the containment field in the fire department basement is starting to break down. And yet another problem--Mayor Walter Peck (William Atherton) still wants to shut the Ghostbusters down even after forty years when he was only a government bureaucrat.

The special effects are amazing but the plot meanders around, trying to give each of the characters stuff to do. The movie is interesting enough but not particularly funny, which is a bit out of character for a Ghostbusters film. A lot of jokes fall flat or are too predictable to work well. The cast is earnest at their roles. No one is outstanding or terrible. The movie has a lot of fan service for franchise fans, which was fun to me (I am a great fan of the original film). I am glad I watched it but probably won't revisit it again.

Mildly recommended--this is for fans of the series.

Thursday, August 29, 2024

CA Geocaching July 2024

We had a vacation in California, so naturally we did a lot of geocaching there.

The very first cache was at SFO airport! Public Art at San Francisco International requires the finder to take a picture with one of almost a dozen works of art scattered around the airport. If a traveler is passing through, there's at least one in every terminal behind security. There's also plenty outside of security for locals just visiting the airport to get a virtual. I posed by New Generation (2015) by Louisiana Bendolph in Terminal 3.

At the airport

Japanese Garden Cache is in San Mateo next to the Japanese Garden. The cache was a classic hide under a bench.

Not where the cache is

We also worked on the Architecture of San Mateo Adventure Lab and Bair Island Adventure Lab.

A bit of the architecture

A bit of the island

In San Francisco, we found two earthcaches, Greywacke & Alcatraz Terrane -- Telegraph Hill, and Alcatraz 'the rock' Formation Earthcache. They both are about the bedrock that make Alcatraz Island "The Rock" and Telegraph Hill a solid object. Who knew they had the same stone? Both caches had questions about the qualities of the rock and required pictures.

Telegraph Hill background

Picture facing away from the rock formation on Alcatraz

Thanks from Monique is a fairly typical find on the Stanford campus; Menlo Circus is by the Menlo Circus Club in Atherton.

Not very campusy but very geocachey

Not much of a circus

Down in Sunnyvale, we found Our Lady's Guard, a hide near a tall and impressive statue of Jesus's mom.

Great statue of Our Lady

The next pair of geocaches were a matched set of a sort: Market Lunch and Lunch at the Embassy were not far from our hotel and made a nice one-two punch of early morning caching. Market Lunch happened to be more 1400th find! Too bad I didn't take any pictures.

I went to the Lawrence Train Station in Sunnyvale and found Lawerence Train Station! The area also hosts Challenge of the Century (1x100) and Challenge of the Century (2x100), where the finder needs to have found 100 of one or two types of caches, respectively. I qualified for both so I signed both logs!

A train at the station!

We had a lot of other fun in California which will be coming soon to the blog!

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Book Review: Hillbilly Elegy by J. D. Vance

Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis by J. D. Vance

This heart-wrenchingly honest biography and commentary describes J. D. Vance's movement from early childhood in poverty-stricken Appalachian Kentucky to a prosperous adulthood as a Marine Corps vet and Yale Law School graduate. Now, he is a junior senator from Ohio and a Vice Presidential candidate, developments not covered in the book. He had a blend of good luck, hard work, and people looking out for him that enabled the changes in his life. 

The memoir is about more than Vance achieving the American Dream. It's a look at the contrast between the poorest elements of American society and the affluent elements. His family includes a sister, grandparents, and aunts and uncles who gave various sorts of support. His mother struggled with addiction and went through many husbands and boyfriends. His biological father left early, leaving Vance with a constant string of father figures who came and left with varying degrees of interaction with Vance. His grandmother and grandfather on his mother's side (Mamaw and Papaw) became stand-in parents, though they lived an almost cliched hillbilly lifestyle. They were loyal to family but fought a lot, verbally and physically. Internal family conflicts were kept in the family. Outsiders (like strangers, social workers, or neighbors) were kept at arms-length. The family believed in the American Dream but often wouldn't put the effort in to make their lives better. 

Vance's immediate family moved to Ohio for better jobs and better circumstances. But they brought their culture and attitudes with them, leading to a rough start socially and academically. His mom always got in fights, making home life tough. Mamaw lived not far away and Vance would often go to her house as a refuge. In high school, he shifted his focus to academics and lived long term with Mamaw. After graduation, he spent four years in the Marine Corps where he learned all the skills and discipline that successful adults need. He came out, went to Ohio State University where he almost relapsed academically. Wanting to be a lawyer, he put the work in to make it to Yale, where he met a wonderful woman and got more life advice from teachers that helped him navigate the unfamiliar world of the elite.

While Vance discusses the problems that face the rural poor (which is not so much different from the urban poor--lack of father figures, promiscuity, drug and alcohol addictions), he does not have a lot of concrete solutions. Some government programs are well-intentioned but counter-productive. The unstable family life with no real father figure has a huge negative impact that can be overcome, but that takes a lot of work both personally and civically. As a child, Vance depended on his family network (especially his sister and grandmother) to survive. As an adult, he depended on his social network (especially teachers and mentors) to thrive in unfamiliar environments. He worked hard and had a lot of support. 

Government solutions are fraught with peril. Vance grew up with the hillbilly attitude that politicians are crooks and the last thing to do is get government (local, state, or federal) involved in your problems. Then he worked during college at the Ohio State House and saw how most of the representatives were well-intentioned people. The government can provide help but people need both to want and accept help, along with the very difficult admission that they need help. 

The book is a tough and insightful read into the various cultures that inhabit our country.

Recommended.

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park, Santa Cruz, California

Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park is just north of Santa Cruz, California. It is named after a local businessman who died in 1903. His family donated some of the land to be a public park. The park opened in 1954 and has grown to 1,750 acres over the years. It is home to old-growth redwood trees, some of which are over two thousand years old. The San Lorenzo River runs into and through the park. So does a rail line. The park has camp grounds and picnic areas. We started our visit with a picnic lunch before hiking in to a beach deep in the park. 

A happy sign and a less happy sign

The river is fed by rainwater in the area. The winters are usually wetter. In December 1981 a big storm came and flooded the area. No one died in the flood but twenty people died in mudslides caused by that same storm. The park was mostly submerged.

Glad we didn't come in 1982

The picnic area has some natural fencing along with amenities that would probably survive a flood.

Fenced-off parking

Grill for roasting big slabs of meat?

A sink

We walked over to the visitor center. On the way, we saw our first sign of the local inhabitants.

Walking in woods

This made us SCATter

The nature center

The center has the typical items: a scale model of the park, some taxidermied locals, skulls, etc.

We started on the far left

Big cat

Skulls of critters

We started our hike through the old-growth redwoods, seeing some amazing trees that are over two hundred feet tall.

Three trees in one

A fallen tree

A massive trunk

Many of the trees are large enough to provide shelter to us smaller humans. Sometimes a group of trees grew together. Other times, fire hollowed out the center of the tree to provide room inside!

An entrance

Peekaboo!

Could be used as a table if we were ten feet tall

Another shelter

A bumpy tree

Standing in a stump

We went inside one tree. Our group was ten and we all fit comfortably inside, though it was dark. This particular tree was used as a home with a wooden floor and a stove. The creature comforts were removed over the years.

Looking up a tree from inside

The floor

Other trees provide nice tunnels to crawl through. 

Which one to go in?

Coming out of a tree

Yet another shelter

Our hike took us to the Garden of Eden beach on the San Lorenzo, but we still had a ways to go. We came to a train bridge that has a pedestrian crossing below.

Sighting the train bridge

A simple pedestrian bridge

Better view of the bridge

Walking along the train tracks

We saw a grove of trees that probably all grew out of the root system of a central tree--a nature-made fort!

Intelligent design?

Our path went along the tracks. Eventually a train came along so we waved to the passengers.

Walking on the trainbed

The river below

Train coming!

Expensive, covered seating

Cheaper open seating!

We made it to the trailhead leading down to the beach where we had a good time in the water.

Climbing down

People already here!

More of the beach and river

The other side of the river

Daughter and son in the water

More of the same

Working together

One of the low cliffs provided a spot to jump off into the water. None of our family did this. Plenty of other teenagers did.

Flying woman!

King of the mountain

A beach just down stream

Swimming to the other beach

More fun at the beach

After an hour or two of fun, we headed back through the redwoods, seeing some man-made shelters along with the natural shelters.

Stick piles?

More of the same

Another open door

Occasional clearings have smaller growth.

A break from the trees

Admiring 200+ footers

Trees growing on trees!

Another benefactor of the park

The visit was amazing!