What we learnt from a historical election

  1. WP should call the shots in the opposition now, because it’s clear they’re the only ones that can push the PAP into the 50+ percentiles consistently. They also fulfilled their strategic objective of capturing a GRC, so assuming they can hold it in the next election, that’s the thin end of the wedge for the forthcoming two-party system. As much as I want a strong third party and seeing how ossified the cozy 2 party structure in the US and Britain have become (granted, those are ACTUAL mature democracies, so rot has set in after so much time), Singapore is simply too small to support more than 2 parties of significant size.
  2. I don’t know what is it with my Teochew demographic, but I find it hilarious we’re the bastion of Singaporean opposition these days and simply refuse to be dislodged. Ah well, it’s nothing to be ashamed of, quite the contrary.
  3. I hope someone wasn’t pulling my rock-hard leg when he said an East Coast MP had mentioned on the record during a post-election interview that George Yeo should be president. Even by the PAP’s usual obliviousness to reality, they shouldn’t be stupid enough to hand priceless political hay over to the opposition (and if I was running things in the white camp, that person would never advance further in politics again). It’s also against the normal SOP of the party, as it usually discards fallen politicians like worthless scrap without fail. NO TIME FOR LOSERS eh, Harry?
  4. Seriously Mediacorp? How Pravda-ish can you get? Granted, I only observed the Channel 8 coverage, but there was barely anything spoken on Aljunied all night as they could possibly get away with, and then some up until the actual result. Then they covered Low’s victory speech but subsequently drowned us with the usual drivel from the PAP’s successfully elected new candidates. That’s as eyerolling as it gets, but OF COURSE they then had to reserve the Potong Pasir loss right to the very end to spike the WP victory narrative. Local media, as predictable as it gets. It’s a pity we’re so insignificant in the grand scheme of things, because our elections badly require some third party coverage. Maybe by a respectable network such as Al Jazeera….oh wait, dumped out of SG because CNA would wither before any actual competition. Me bad.
  5. Badly grimacing Dragon Prince is like balm on my black heart.
  6. The Chiam era is over. The writing was on the wall though, since he barely held on last time round and is now weakened post-stroke. Even his last sympathy visit to his old haunting grounds this week failed to have much significant effect. It probably WAS over when the SDP fiasco occured, since that robbed him of his old power base and forced him to start all over again, and unlike many of his opposition peers, he just isn’t that great at the most crucial aspect of being an opposition lynchpin now, recruitment of the ranks. I guess it’s poignant that on the day that the opposition made electoral history, the curtain should fall on a fixture of the old order.
  7. Oh dear, Mr Nett Happiness. Things didn’t turn out too well for a SM tonight eh? A pity Tin made it in, but I suspect Goh won’t have to worry much about a power base anymore in his party, assuming he still had a significant one before Sat. He did win though, so that is still a nett plus in the happy column, right? Consider the alternative of drowning sorrows together with a former foreign affairs minister.

The Game of Thrones is afoot

So it’s finally here, George R.R. Martin’s magnum opus on the tubes after lengthy gestation. Yes ladies and gentlemen, no more cliche Tolkienesque uppity elves and grumpy dwarves to make us roll our eyes. While not strictly a measure of quality, it helps, unless you’re a certain Sam Raimi adapting a certain fantasy series that should be best left nameless.

I don’t think any spoilers are neccessary for something that is best experienced with a clean slate of mind, assuming the watcher is unfamilar with the literary canon. Suffice it to say that the first episode seems to be as faithful as a television series can get with regard to its original material, and the only reason anyone who has read the books should stay away is to avoid fixing the actors’ images into the character slots whenever they read the books again. I don’t think it’s that big a concern, because most of the casting calls seems well done, even if they’ve understandable discrepancies in terms of appearances. The only role I think is unsuitable is Michelle Fairley as Catelyn. While I’m not too convinced about Kit Harington’s Owen Hargreaves impersonation as Snow, it’s a minor quibble compared to how nailed on others are (such as Daenerys and the Lannisters.) Sean Bean is the biggest name here, and he carries Eddard Stark with the kind of solid, pensive dignity that he projects so easily. Although there isn’t a huge degree of audience hand-holding, watchers should still be able to get the gist of the plot, with all four major houses (the Starks, Lannisters, Baratheons and Targaryens) making their appearances.

It’s hard to fault the technical aspects, since this is the most expensive single TV season for a series ever made. Following like for like in the first novel, the scene beyond the Wall is as good an opening for a “realistic” fantasy series as it gets, showing the “out of sight, out of mind” approach to the supernatural elements Martin uses for the books, with nothing allowed to overwhelm the “meat and potatoes” political struggles of Westeros. The bleak beauty of the North Irish countryside is used to great effect in the Winterfell shots, and the use of music is naunced and low-key. What’s most amusing are the visuals for the opening theme, which are artistically novel and smack of sheer nerd appeal to the fanbase. The episode also ends on the best possible cliffhanger, the first of many illustrations that the characters of this show are different from the usual high fantasy treatment, and plot shields are far and few in between. HBO has already renewed the series for a 2nd season, which will hopefully suggest confidence that what happened with Rome when the show was cut short and the plot had to be adjusted with difficulty won’t happen again here.

When did Korean girls transform from fuddy-duddy to smoking hot?

I don’t have the answer.

But I distinctly remembered that the Koreans girls were once seen as the poor cousins of Japanese girls.  Japanese girls were the cute/sexy/hot ones while the Koreans girls were… well, motherly.  In a Kim Jong Il manner.

Is it the Korean dramas that sport ridiculously looking gay dudes who sent girls swooning over some stupid sit-up scene? A nefarious soft power projection by the South Korea gov? The vast improvement in skillsets of the Korean plastic surgeons? All of the above?

Anyway, who cares? A couple of years down the road, I’ll be too old to be looking at teenage girls prancing on the stage without feeling like a dirty old bastard. Might as well enjoy the ride it last.

Random Korean girl group

elemantary my dear watson

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I’m not Sherlock’s sidekick nor that shop you buy tissue paper from!

I was just ‘glancing’ through the list of torrents for the day when I came across eztv offering “Jeopardy: IBM Challenge” for download, coincidentally the game was brought up again during the end segment of video podcast ‘The Totally Rad Show”.  Naturally, this aroused my interest, so I checked out what exactly is going on… turns out, IBM had invented their latest AI, nicknamed Watson.

Being a non-tech head, I can only explain Watson is really er…smart.  Watching it compete against two of Jeopardy’s best players ever totally blows your mind.  I’ll give you a spoiler, Watson won.

No, it didn’t just win.  It blew away the competition.

You really gotta take your hats off to the folks at IBM for being able to create this…but on the other hand, you kinda wonder when it’s gonna come ‘online ‘ and set the nukes on us. ha!

The wiki entry says that Watson will be used for advancing medical science… but why just limit it to that?

Here’s a few TSC suggestions of our own :

  1. Let Batman finally have his Batcomputer!
  2. let it crack the DaVinci Code
  3. teach George Lucas how to direct movies
  4. show us the tactics to defeat FC Barcelona
  5. what women REALLY want from men
  6. run for our next General Election
  7. fansub all anime
  8. tell us if the world really ending in 2012?
  9. predict the Toto
  10. explain what does “42” really mean?