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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 04/20/01 -- Vol. 19, No. 42

       Chair/Librarian: Mark Leeper, 732-817-5619, mleeper@avaya.com
       Factotum: Evelyn Leeper, 732-332-6218, eleeper@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist: Rob Mitchell, robmitchell@avaya.com
       HO Chair Emeritus: John Jetzt, jetzt@avaya.com
       HO Librarian Emeritus: Nick Sauer, njs@lucent.com
       Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper
       All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

       The Science Fiction Association of Bergen County meets on the
       second Saturday of every month in Upper Saddle River; call
       201-447-3652 for details.  The Denver Area Science Fiction
       Association meets 7:30 PM on the third Saturday of every month at
       Southwest State Bank, 1380 S. Federal Blvd.

       ===================================================================

       1. In the March 5, 2001, issue of THE NEW YORKER, Malcolm  Gladwell
       has  an  article called "The Trouble with Fries."  In this he talks
       about the origins of various McDonald's  foods  and  examines  them
       from  the  aspect  of  how healthy they are.  He recounts the sorry
       history of the McLean Deluxe burger, which actually did better than
       their  regular burger on blind taste tests.  It was the result of a
       project at Auburn University to make a healthier and better-tasting
       burger.   They  developed  the AU Lean, which tasted better and had
       less fat.  McDonalds made the burger and  sold  it  as  the  McLean
       Deluxe  burger.   In  spite of the fact they were building a better
       burger, it did not sell  and  was  soon  off  the  menu.   Gladwell
       concludes  "People  liked  the AU Lean in blind taste tests because
       they didn't know it was AU Lean; they were fooled into thinking  it
       was regular ground beef.  But nobody was fooled when it came to the
       McLean Deluxe.  It was sold at the healthy choice--and who goes  to
       McDonald's for health food?"

       Well, it is very possible that that is  true.   People  really  may
       want  unhealthy  food  when they go to McDonald's.  Somehow I don't
       think so.  I would argue that is  not  really  what  is  happening.
       Things  are  changing  with time and healthy foods are getting more
       popular.  There are  three  forces  pushing  in  the  direction  of
       healthier diets.  Those are esthetics, education, and experience.

       The first of the  forces  is  esthetics.   Our  taste  in  food  is
       changing.   Food  tastes  during  the  1940s and 1950s were deadly.
       People ate fat and  cholesterol  in  quantities  that  are  vaguely
       nauseating  today.   It seems to me that in BACK TO THE FUTURE they
       made that point.  One of the time travelers was offered a meal at a
       1950s lunch bar that had enough fat to float a battleship and chose
       instead to have a salad and then asked for a diet soda.  And to  be
       honest, that really sounded better even to me in the audience.  Our
       tastes have changed since the 1940s, 1950s,  and  even  the  1960s.
       Food  we  now  consider being very unhealthy really sounded good in
       the post-War years.   It  seems  to  me  my  father  had  eggs  for
       breakfast  most  weekday  mornings when I was growing up.  That was
       regular  cholesterol-filled  eggs.   Later  he  did  have   cardiac
       problems  and  it  very  probably  was  connected  to the amount of
       cholesterol he had in his normal diet.  Red  meat  was  a  standard
       staple  of  his diet.  Sunday dinner was usually steak or barbecued
       ribs.  Even as I write this I realize that it has been years  since
       I  had any kind of red meat in my house.  Out of the house I eat it
       only rarely.  But at home it must be years since  I  have  had  red
       meat.   That  is  not  entirely for health reasons, part is ethics.
       But attitudes about eating have certainly changed.

       There are still signs in the media that we have  the  feeling  that
       real  men  do  not  watch  what  they  eat.  In TWISTER the tornado
       hunters visit  a  friend  because  she  serves  them  steak,  eggs,
       sausage,  and  a  meal that is a killer in every sense of the word.
       It looked so good and at the same time was more dangerous than  the
       tornadoes they are chasing.  Depending on your mood, if you thought
       about all the grease you were seeing, it could  have  been  vaguely
       stomach-turning.

       Reinforcing the change in tastes is the  second  force,  education.
       Kids  are being trained in first and second grade to have the right
       attitudes about food and drugs and racism and conservation.   We've
       heard  of  stories like the little girl who came home and threw out
       her father's cigarettes.  Societies have always  indoctrinated  the
       young  with  attitudes  we  have  wanted them to have and called it
       education.  It is done  subtly,  but  every  society  does.   Today
       children  are  learning  earlier  in  some schools to cringe at the
       thought of unhealthy, fat-laden foods.  That will probably exert  a
       big force in people's decision of how to eat.

       The third force will only  come  with  time  and  currently  it  is
       probably  pushing  in the wrong direction.  In fact it was probably
       the reason the McLean Deluxe failed.  The reason people  would  not
       eat  the  McLean  Deluxe  is  experience.   In  spite of everything
       Gladwell says, I still believe that  everything  else  being  equal
       people  would  have  preferred  the healthy burger to the unhealthy
       one.  The fact is that we cannot bring ourselves  to  believe  that
       everything else could be equal.  The history of healthy alternative
       food is an inglorious one.  It includes glubby Metrical milk shakes
       that  taste  more  like  barium  cocktails.   You  have soft drinks
       sweetened with saccharine that leaves a bitter after taste.   There
       are cardboard-like breakfast bars.  There are foods made with weird
       grains that go pop in your mouth.  We have whole  generations  that
       have grown up with diet foods that you would have to be starving to
       want to eat.  Experience of bad diet foods  is  frightening  people
       away  from  good  diet  foods like the McLean Deluxe.  It will take
       some years of good diet foods to undo the damage done.

       Those days are coming along.  To me the new artificially  sweetened
       sodas  taste  as good as real thing, though others I know disagree.
       And even when you have had diet foods that really taste as good  as
       the  originals,  then the lawyers take over to make sure the public
       is warned about any possible side effect the company might be  sued
       about.   I have never heard of anybody ever getting a negative side
       effect from eating an Olestra product.  Olestra is a fat substitute
       that  has  no fat effects on the human body.  But just in case, the
       lawyers put a label on every Olestra product that is a  little  too
       nauseating  to quote here, much less on a bag of potato chips.  But
       in a few years people will have grown  up  who  have  never  tasted
       primitive  diet  foods.  Hopefully in another fifty years a healthy
       diet will taste as good as an unhealthy one.  People will  be  used
       to food that is healthy and tastes good.  Then a name like "McLean"
       will no longer be a kiss of death  and  will  actually  be  a  good
       thing.  But for now we are still in the period when one makes a big
       aesthetic sacrifice for most healthy foods.  [-mrl]

       ===================================================================

       2. THE TAILOR OF PANAMA (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule:  John  le  Carre's  intelligence  game
                 story  is  adapted to the screen as a sly black
                 comedy of the special  relationship  between  a
                 failing  British  spy, one with some suspicious
                 parallels to James Bond,  and  a  posh  British
                 tailor  living  in Panama City.  A good cast is
                 headed by  Geoffrey  Rush  and  the  ironically
                 chosen Pierce Brosnan.   This is an intelligent
                 and adult spy film with clever statements about
                 both  the  intelligence  community  and the spy
                 film  in  general.    John   Boorman   directs.
                 Rating: 7 (0 to 10), low +2 (-4 to +4)

       Spy stories come in  many  types.   While  Ian  Fleming  very  much
       defined  many  people's  expectations of the spy story with what is
       essentially a sophisticated comic book hero and what  is  basically
       comic  book  action,  John  le Carre's style has tended more toward
       realism and creating good characters.  His approach has always been
       one  less of heroics and action.  George Smiley is a complex three-
       dimensional man who is away from most of the action  and  who  uses
       his  brains  rather than his fists.  THE TAILOR OF PANAMA, based on
       le Carre's novel is a devious little black comedy set at the  outer
       edges of the spy game.  Pierce Brosnan plays Andy Osnard, a British
       agent who has all  the  famous  James  Bond  vices--sex,  gambling,
       drinking,  smoking--without  ever having had the James Bond sort of
       successes.  Osnard is given a rather unenviable posting to  Panama.
       There  is not much to do there, but at least, his superiors comfort
       him, there is a vital British interest in the canal.

       In Panama, Osnard quickly latches onto a British tailor  who  knows
       the  important people.  Harry Pendal (Geoffrey Rush) represents the
       esteemed firm of Braithwaite and Pendal, a Saville Row Tailor.  But
       Harry  is  not  all he would have people believe he is.  Harry is a
       bit down on his luck and Osnard  had  information  he  can  use  to
       blackmail   Harry.    Harry   must   provide   Osnard  with  useful
       intelligence information that will be passed to Osnard's superiors.
       Each   for   his  own  reasons  overlooks  the  fact  that  Harry's
       credibility has already been shown to be  questionable.   Meanwhile
       Harry  introduces  Osnard  to  a  number  of  colorful  people from
       Panama's underworld and from the previous resistance to Noriega.

       One is a good long  way  into  THE  TAILOR  OF  PANAMA  before  any
       character  seems  so  likable that you are hoping the best for him.
       The two main characters are each scoundrels  and  choosing  between
       them  is not much of a choice.  One ends up rooting for the smooth-
       talking Harry, not a hero but a flimflam man  with  good  instincts
       and the best of a bad lot.

       THE TAILOR OF PANAMA boasts good characters played by a good  cast.
       Harry  becomes  more  interesting  as  the  film wears on.  He is a
       smooth talker and seems almost too poised and  well-placed  not  to
       enter  the  intelligence  game.   His  wife (Jamie Lee Curtis) in a
       position of responsibility with the canal.  Harry knows people  who
       really  did  stand up against Noriega, or rather knows what is left
       of them.  Osnard gets some lessons in real politics, but  still  is
       more  an  more  out  of  place  in  the  real  world  of Panama and
       Intelligence work.  His womanizing charm and his polished ways only
       make  him  look more and more like a fool. An almost unrecognizable
       Brendan Gleeson, plays Mickie Abraxas who is as much of a  hero  as
       Panama   has,   a  man  who  speaks  his  mind  regardless  of  the
       consequences.  Mickie becomes  the  center  of  Osnard's  plotting.
       Director  John  Boorman  makes maximal use of the tawdry setting of
       Panama City, which the  script  describes  as  "Casablanca  without
       heroes."

       Whether or not it was consciously intended as such, THE  TAILOR  OF
       PANAMA  is  sort  of  an  adult answer to a James Bond film.  It is
       about seedy agents in a seedy setting giving results to the  secret
       service.   Those  results  are  not going to get any special thanks
       from the Prime Minister in the end like we have  seen  in  so  many
       Bond  films.   Osnard uses sex as a weapon as James Bond would, but
       to much less effect.  Almost every convention of the  romantic  spy
       film  is  stood on its ear in this film.  This seems like more what
       the spy business is really like.  I rate it a 7  on  the  0  to  10
       scale and a low +2 on the -4 to +4 scale. [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          HO 1K-644 732-817-5619
                                          mleeper@avaya.com

           Just because the person who criticizes you is an 	   idiot does not make him wrong.
                                          -- Roger Rosenblatt


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