Opinion



By Melissa Lafsky July 16, 2007, 3:36 pm

The FREAKest Links: Vive La Speeding Edition

Via Marginal Revolution: the U.K. Times reports that, while the installation of speed cameras has led to far more tickets being issued and licenses canceled in France, French drivers are circumventing the laws by selling their good driving points to speeders. Those with poor driving records can and will pay another driver up to 1,500 Euros to substitute his or her own points for the offender’s.

In a smart use of technology to fill the publishing industry’s need for more efficient marketing, Wired editor and The Long Tail author Chris Anderson writes on his blog that he’s launched BookTour.com, an online service that allows virtually any author to connect with virtually any audiences. Except not virtually: in real life.

Borders bookstores in the U.K. have pulled the book Tintin in the Congo from its children’s sections after the Commission for Racial Equality charged that the work “contains imagery and words of hideous racial prejudice.” The chain will continue to sell the book, which was first published in 1931, in the adult graphic novels section.


3 Comments

  1. 1. July 16, 2007 4:39 pm Link

    and when will Disney be re-releasing Song of the South?

    — discordian
  2. 2. July 17, 2007 1:35 am Link

    Selling ones points to poor drivers strikes me as a lot like selling ones Carbon rights to polluters…. not sure whether it improves highway safety or the air or instead simply allows the rich companies and people to keep polluting and speeding.

    — edwinlee
  3. 3. February 23, 2008 11:13 am Link

    For some reason the British except more surveillance then we do. Not only do they have speeding cameras, they have 1000’s of cameras watching every inch of their public places. Perhaps over time as our war on terror evolves, we too as a society will accept cameras in more and more aspects of our public lives. I hope this isn’t the case though.

    Rebecca Johnson
    http://www.nytrafficticketsolutions.com

    — New York Traffic Lawyer

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Shopsin's (120 Essex Street) is a New York institution, a restaurant that began as a grocery store; its owner, Kenny Shopsin, is colorful, irascible, and talented. Shopsin's is famous for breakfast but also for its vast, unusual, common-sense menu. Shopsin has just written a book that is half cookbook and half memoir, entirely fascinating. I had never sat down and read a cookbook from cover to cover but that is what happened with Shopsin's book (co-written with Carolynn Carreno). It is called Eat Me. The introduction is a reprint of a New Yorker article by Calvin (Bud) Trillin, a Shopsin's regular. If you do go to the restaurant, do pay attention to Shopsin's idiosyncrasies, because he allegedly has a Soup-Nazi-like intolerance that may earn you permanent exile from his restaurant. (SJD)


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If you live in or are visiting New York and have children, do everything you can to take in one of the Young People's Concerts at the New York Philharmonic. Even if you don’t love the music on that day’s program -- we recently attended “Ravel’s Paris,” not my favorite by a long shot -- all the extras in the program are terrific: the dancers, composers, instrumentalists, and explainers who are paraded out by conductor Delta David Gier to put the music in context for the kids. (SJD)

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