Caliboy in Brooklyn
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Two Animated Short Films
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
Methyl Methacrylate Tank Crisis Update
So, crisis averted. Well, explosion averted. It turns out that the endless spray of water kept the temperature down just enough to 1) cause a crack in the tank that relieved pressure, which 2) in turn helped the methyl methacrylate cure and solidify.
Most of the fifty-thousand evacuees have been allowed to return home...well, 34,000 have been allowed to return, while around 16,000 remain on prolly-best-to-stay-away orders.
What got me thinking was when they said they don't know what caused the runaway temperature spike that caused the venting on Thursday that led to this wild crisis in the first place. They don't know, and that makes sense. If watching HBO's Chernobyl as often as I have (what can I say---I like bad-vibe programming) has taught me anything, it's that it takes some time to properly investigate these things once the fallout is finally mitigated.
What caused the crisis in the first place?
A different conversation I had added to the tapestry within which I view these things nowadays. The other day I took both kids to swim, and I was talking to the mom of one of Cass's buddies and swim-classmates. She was relaying a conversation she had had with her mother. Her mom is a teacher in the nursing program at Cal State Dominguez Hills, and she was lamenting the fact that her students pretty much all relied on ChatGPT, or other large-language-models from other AI programmers, to get their work done. And with an exasperated, distance-staring glare she said with a sigh, "In a couple year's time...you may have to be concerned about your nurse in the ER or operating room."
Articles are rampant about a growing crisis in higher education, where students have en masse moved away from doing their own work and use LLMs to write their papers, or organize their research at the very least. An AITA entry on Reddit a while back was from a girl who's law-school boyfriend would take every question from every assignment and put them into ChatGPT, then copy and paste the response without even reading it.
Now...that's pretty bleak.
While I don't think the crisis was caused by a person who had LLMs do their work for them and then got a job that they were unprepared for and who was actually watching reels on their phone instead of the temperature gauges---and I don't think that---it was a startling reminder that THAT BLEAK REALITY WILL HAPPEN SOMEDAY.
In Pripyat at the Chernobyl plant it was arrogance mixed with hubris and ignorance. But they also had someone at the helm who had 25 years experience in nuclear facilities. That longterm experience may have added to the arrogance, but we're all pretty sure that Anatoly Dyatlov actually did lots of work in nuclear power plants, and didn't have AI do all his work for him.
Just another attack on intellectualism: the propensity to value the completion of the work to get the document over what you may learn from the substance of your studies. Once it becomes more about the document, it's easy to find ways around exerting the needed effort and just get the document at all costs. It becomes very easy to justify just doing the easy stuff and skipping challenges at every turn. Mike Judge's Idiocracy unfolding in real time.
At least in Orange County they still had some hard-working smarties up to the task of round-the-clock working to keep a tank from exploding and obliterating a suburban neighborhood in Garden Grove.
At some point, though?
Monday, May 25, 2026
Dewey Decimal System Notes
So...being book people, we do book things. Like go to our local library, the Billie Jean King Main Library, a half mile away. It's pretty cool looking, plus all the cool activities, plus the playground in the back side. We try to make it each Saturday.
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| It was unexpectedly closed on a recent visit. |
The other day, as the kids perused the sections they like---Cass in the graphic novel and middle school reader sections; Camille in the comics, young readers, and art book sections---I figured they should know about Dewey and his decimal system.
So I went to a computer and paused for a second, thinking of what to look up. I really wanted to pick a book that I could actually take home, that I would actually want to take home, and that they would most likely have.
I settled on a National Book Winner, the Non-fiction winner from 1978:
Friday, May 22, 2026
So this is happening...
I'm not a journalist by trade, and this could easily be a bizarre little post in due time, but there's a tank with between 6,000 and 7,000 gallons of methyl methacrylate in Garden Grove in "crisis mode" and overheating at the time of this post. Orange County Fire Authority Division Chief Craig Covey is quoted thusly: "This thing is going to fail, and we don't know when." One bad scenario is it bursts open, releasing a wave of toxic chemical onto the surrounding concrete and a plume of toxic gas into the air. They've been sandbagging the parking lot just in case, trying to halt possible runoff into the drains, creeks, and ocean.
A different, far worse possibility, would be the methyl methacrylate tank exploding instead of rupturing.
There has been a mandatory evacuation order set place, with residents being told to flee for their safety (!). They've been evacuating the area all day, closing schools, going door to door, setting up centers for the 40,000 or so residents to wait it out.
This is about 16 miles away, and I took the kids to their swim class at 3:30 just outside the evacuation order boundary.
Here's an NPR link if you'd like some ongoing updates.
Thursday, May 14, 2026
Roundabout Way to Mokele-Mbembe
Oh jeeze, try to follow this stupefying line...
At Free Comic Book Day, I picked up this for nostalgia reasons:
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Had to Join the Fun
Happy Birthday Homer!
I was Bart's age when the show first aired, and now I'm older than Homer is regularly shown to be, depending on the season, 36 or 38 years old.
And, I have a son a few months younger than Bart is. Hard to wrap my brain around that stat, by the by.
Crazy how time flies when...your favorite show is on television for...36+ years?
Monday, May 11, 2026
Mission Impossible Notes
While visiting Solvang one of the past trips, likely the most recent Thanksgiving, Cass and Uncle Val were perusing the menu on their enormous television. Cass probably said, "Whoa! What's that?" and Uncle Val surely said, "Aw, Cass! That's Tom Cruise and he's awesome. This is a Mission Impossible movie!" and he hit play. I came in later and the 7th film in the series was playing, Dead Reckoning is its subtitle.
I caught most of it, and knew about some of the scenes (like the motorcycle off the cliff), and can say I enjoyed it, mostly. It doesn't really have a conclusion as much as it ends, and the credits roll, and we get ready for the second half, the 8th film in the franchise with the ominous subtitle The Final Reckoning.
I came across some think pieces about the badassery of Tom Cruise in the ridiculous stunts throughout both this franchise as well as other Cruise-related films, and felt compelled to go back and rewatch this series.
But "rewatch" isn't accurate, since I hadn't ever scene any of the Mission Impossible movies. I did watch the 1988 reboot series, with Stefano's son Tony DiMera in the rubber-mask-on-face role and Peter Graves as the boss-man, and enjoyed the espionage content as much as any ten-ish year old.
But by 1996, when Mission Impossible the First was released, I was deep into my classic-movie rabbit-hole and had a Tom Cruise-shaped middle-finger blotting out projects he starred in. Even Corrie saw it and, against type for her, remembered a fair amount of it.
It was after the think pieces about action set pieces that I perused the Web...could I find a box set of DVDs reasonably priced...where were they streaming...and then last month, Corrie and Cass announced: Mission Impossibles, 1 through 5, leaving Netflix on April 30th.
Since we only watch the television in earnest on weekends, after 3pm, let's say we had some intense Tom Cruise afternoon/evenings. Brian dePalma, John Woo, Joss Whedon...directors from all over the "action" world come in and do their thing. Jon Voit, Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg (playing the Ving Rhames role), Alec Baldwin(?), Jeremy Renner(??), even Angela Bassett and Henry Cavill and Philip Seymour Hoffman and Emilio Estevez?
The flow of women isn't quite James Bondian, but it's a thing, and you hope they develop someone beyond "hot for Ethan Hunt" or "someone for Ethan to be hot for." Is his wife (Michele Monaghan) someone who fits that bill? Nah...I guess the best foil would be Ilsa (Rebecca Ferguson). Maybe Agent Carter from the last two...?
Anyway, after four or five of these movies, while talking with Corrie, I realized that I didn't have a favorite. None of them were, for me, like, this is the one I'd watch again for pleasure, or, this is the one that hits all the right story beats.
That changed, though, for me. I do have a favorite now, and I'll give the reasons, similar to my bullet-point thesis about why Rogue One is the best Star Wars movie.
Mission Impossible: Fallout is the best Mission Impossible movie. It's number 6, so there's a ton of history built up, but watching them in order in close time to each other helped with the characters.
- It has Ving Rhames and Simon Pegg and nobody else on the team burning up time---no Jeremy Renner, no extra helpers beyond perpetually wobbly Alec Baldwin;
- It has two ladies for Ethan Hunt (Cruise, if you didn't know by now) to be complicated with, both his ex-wife (Michele Monaghan) and a MI6 British counterpart Ilsa, who both have complicated feelings for him, and he can't have either, nor does he really want either;
- The bad-guy group again has a stupid collective name (the Apostles)
- The bad-guy brains-of-the-op is smug and revenge hungry, but doesn't give me anxiety like the late, great Hoffman;
- The bad-guy muscles-of-the-op is awesome and menacing;
- Cruise ready to go with the CIA op team in the catacomb is peak "Ethan Hunt is still, actually, the good-est good-guy" moment.
- It has dual simultaneous nuclear bomb-disarming teams working against the clock (naturally) while Ethan chases down the other badguy in a helicopter. It's a helicopter chase scene.
- Fallout is the 6th film, meaning you know the goodguy team will win---those stakes are pretty nonexistent. I mean, "They're gonna nuke the food supply for two-billion people!" is a pretty good pickle to have to solve, but you never think they won't, and I'm fine with that. It's in witnessing the execution that the fun happens.



