The Madman Doctrine

Senile Satan

He is acting like a cornered animal now. Yesterday’s four-letter word outburst is only the latest and clearest example of this fact. He is trapped and he knows it. No matter how much he blusters there is no way that he can bomb himself out of this war. He has started something that he cannot finish. He is left to threaten and flail. Maybe he will resort to committing war crimes. Who knows what the mad king will do next? I’m hoping that he tacos and chickens out again. 

Rosencrantz & Guildenstern are Dead

Black Box Theater at the Kranzberg

Formerly a Woolworth’s, the Kranzberg Arts Center on Grand is a venue that we have visited many times before, for art shows that have been displayed in its gallery. I never knew that it also housed a theater. Located at the intersection of Olive and Grand, it acts as a gatekeeper between the midtown theater district, with the Fabulous Fox and the ever-expanding St. Louis University campus. The so-called SLU-ification of midtown. Its location reminds me of a Saint Louis centric joke that I heard when I first moved to town: Did you hear about Popeye when he came to town? He went down on Olive and thought that it was Grand. After fifty years it now qualifies as a dad joke, because I had to explain it to you.

This play by Tom Stoppard centers upon two minor characters in Shakespeare’s Hamlet. In that play Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are courtiers and former college alums of Hamlet and they become tasked to escort Hamlet to England by his uncle, who after making too much of a nuisance of himself, his uncle orders executed. On the boat ride to England, Hamlet steals the note from his uncle instructing the King of England what to do with Hamlet and substitutes another that names Rosencrantz and Guildenstern as the ones to be killed. In Hamlet they both die, giving this play its title.

Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead is an absurdist comedy that Anne aptly likened to Abbott and Costello meet Cheech and Chong. It is what you get when two minor characters think that the world is all about them. There’s an old joke about the actor who is hired to play the gravedigger in Hamlet. “What is the play about?” his wife asks. “It’s about a gravedigger who meets a prince.” Frankly, I could not tell you what this play is about. Maybe, like the TV show Seinfeld, it is about nothing. Other than dialog not much happens. Even this becomes fodder.

We were on time for the show, which started late anyway, but with a sold-out house, we had to climb the rickety stadium seating to the far corner, for the last two available seats. Once seated, the woman sitting next to me offered her assistance in the event of an emergency. Getting up at intermission to use the restroom, I noticed other less adept patrons having to crawl out of their seats. My other complaint had to do with the lighting or lack thereof. Even to get to the seating, we first had to navigate a “stage” littered with props. Thank God that there was no emergency during this show, even if one of the actors yelled fire in the dark. Compared to the rather staid experience of the Rep with its audience full of stuffy old doctors and lawyers it felt quite avant guard. 

Commander of the Universe

Declan, Commander of the Universe

I am less than impressed with AI. Take for example the animated GIF imbedded in this post. I followed Google’s instructions for creating it. Basically, I wanted to merge the still JPEG background showing Declan playing at Dave’s computer with the cartoonish rocket ship bouncing up-and-down on the computer screen, so that it looks like the rocket is displayed on the screen. Following their instructions I ended up with an unwatchable version that shuddered back-and-forth between the background JPEG and the animated GIF. Like I said, it was unwatchable. Trying to watch it would surely trigger an epileptic fit.

I ended up using a flip card approach. A method that I’ve used before. The same method that Disney used to make Snow White, long ago enough that it is no longer copyrightable. Earlier this week I ran into a similar situation while trying to debug Anne’s iPhone. None of the AI instructions matched the menu trees that were actually on the phone. All of the talk of AI replacing humans I think is overblown. Tech companies who claim that they are doing this also happen to be the same companies that loaded up on employees during the pandemic and are only now shedding them using the convenient excuse of AI. Anyway, I finally got an image of Declan flying a spaceship.