Saturday, July 21, 2007

Thomas Dekker na een zwakke tijdrit

(Bron: NOS)
Thomas Dekker had uitgekeken naar de tijdrit in Albi, maar met een 27ste plek speelde hij geen rol van betekenis. Hij moest zelfs Michael Boogerd voor laten gaan, maar dat had een reden.

" Ik vertrok eigenlijk hartstikke goed (9de na 18 km), maar na 10 minuten kreeg ik last van mijn heup. De afdaling heb ik daarna rustig gereden. Mijn snelheid was toen nul, want ik had een stekende pijn in mijn heup. Jammer, want dit was eigenlijk een ideale tijdrit voor me, zeker met al die bochten", zei Dekker.

" Jammer ook van die regen", vervolgde Dekker. Wiggins is nu 2 minuten sneller. Onder droge omstandigheden versla ik hem altijd in lange tijdritten."


Ik heb nog geen algemeen klassement gezien, dus pas morgen, terwijl we door de Pyreneeen klimmen, kan ik daar meer over zeggen. (Update: hij staat 40e op 33 minuten en 1 seconde) Een erg belangwekkende plaats is het in ieder geval niet. Dekker rijdt nog en hij zal zijn krachten voor Rasmussen moeten aanwenden.

Rasmussen heeft de schade beperkt weten te houden en behoudt daardoor het geel. Ik denk echter, als hij niet gaat aanvallen in de komende drie etappes, dat hij volgende week bij de laatste tijdrit van de eerste plaats gestoten zal worden. Morgen is er al meteen een dag voor de aanval. Een buitencategorie berg als aankomst.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Main course with rice, minced meat and burnt eggplant

Tonight our sabbath meal consisted of rice, minced meat in a tomato sauce and eggplant burnt in the oven. Four to eight servings.

1) Eggplant
Cut the eggplant in two halves. Cover them with tin foil and burn them in the oven for at least 60 minutes at a temperature of 275 degrees.

2) Rice
1 table spoon olive oil
1 big onion
salt
white wine
1 clove of garlic
1 cup of brown rice

Cut the onion and stir fry it for 3 minutes in the oil at medium heat. Add some salt, the rice and keep stirring. Add half a glass of white wine and stir some more. Add two cups of water, cover and boil. When the rice boils add a whole clove of garlic. When the rice is done (after 20 to 30 minutes) stir the rice with a fork. The garlic will have gone soft and you can take it out or - what I prefer - mix it with the whole bowl of rice by stirring.

3) Minced meat in tomato sauce
500 gram minced meat
1 table spoon olive oil
2 tea spoons ground caraway
1 tea spoon ground cardamom
2 handful of fresh basil leaves
1 tea spoon fresh thyme
3 tea spoons fresh sage
4 zucchinis
2 green paprikas
1 dry red hot pepper
2 bay leaves
10 cloves of garlic
3 packages of tomato paste
salt
black pepper

Mix the meat with a pinch of salt, the caraway and the cardamom. Fry it in the pan with the oil. Add the red pepper and the bay leaves. Stir. Cut and add the zucchini and the paprika. Cut 5 cloves of garlic into fine slices and add to the meat. Then squeeze the other 5 and add also. When the zucchini is done, roughly cut the fresh leaves and add. Simmer for 5 minutes and add the tomato paste. Taste and add salt and pepper as needed.

Take the eggplant out of the oven. Cut the halves in two quarts and serve on a plate next to the rice and the sauce.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

SRR 100

The milestone, 100th, podcast of Shrinkrapradio is a conversation between the host Dr. David van Nuys and his friend, SRR listener and promoter Jerry Trumbule. What we find out here for the first time is how Jerry has pushed and guided Dr. Dave into starting, making and developing the Shrinkrapradio podcast. So, in addition to the incomparable Dr. Dave, kudos go to Jerry Trumbule for bringing us one of the best podcasts around.

For the new listener, show #100 is a great entry into the microcosm of SRR. The show delivers highlights from some of the best of the past 100 shows. This gives a fine insight in the palette that is to be discerned. From this show as a starting point, the new listener can go back and pick and choose old shows to listen to.

Jerry and Dave's discussion go over all the aspects of the show, but if at all there is something left to be desired it is that they would have given also some attention to the listener community. By means of a Frappr map and comment pages of each show, SRR has also built a kernel of faithful listeners and I am sure that their very existence has also contributed to the show. Some of them became interviewees, others have had their email questions attended to in the show and maybe most importantly, have given Dr. Dave the necessary backup and stimulants to keep up the good work. The great work.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Simek ontmoet Anne Hermans

Eindelijk weer een normale Simek 's Nachts. Kennelijk is Simek op zijn best met mensen die niet vreselijk bekend zijn en die niet heel erg uitgesproken zijn. En dan is hij op zijn plaats met zachte druk hen tot openhartig spreken te krijgen. Zo ook met Anne Hermans, het pseudoniem waaronder ze een boek over het co-assistent zijn heeft geschreven.

In het gesprek beschrijft ze hoe het was om co-assistent te zijn en hoe ze arts is. Ze vertelt ook dat ze tropenarts wil worden. Het doet Martin Simek - en mij trouwens ook - denken aan het interview dat hij had met Ben Mak, tropenarts. Hermans had het ook beluisterd.

Kennen wij haar aan het eind van het gesprek? De vraag komt aan de orde. Ga luisteren voor het antwoord.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Bitter waters

Did racial cleansing happen in the south of the US in the beginning of the twentieth century? Pulitzer prize winning author Elliot Jaspin wrote a book 'Buried in the bitter waters' about it. He has been invited to the University of Chicago to give a talk about it and that was added to the University Channel Podcast, that combines so many interesting academic lectures.

The anecdotal start of the investigation has mention of the Ku Klux Klan. At the end of the session, when being asked on the KKK influence, Jaspin discloses that only in a specific county in Indiana, the KKK had a hand in the cleansing. Otherwise, so it seems, the initiative to drive out blacks was purely a sort of spontaneous local organizational effort.

To sum up, black population dropped dramatically in so many southern counties that Jaspin had to pick and choose some to write about. So, the material is based on a selection from a pool that suggests many more incidences.

Monday, July 16, 2007

SGU and Mental Health Practice

The latest edition of the Skeptics' Guide to the Universe pays attention to a subject which interests me a lot and would like to see handled also in Shrinkrapradio and/or the Wise Counsel podcast. This subject is Skepticism in the realm of mental health practice.

I find it rather scary, that the title of 'therapist' is not protected and as a consequence, therapists range from conscientious mental help facilitators to quacks and scam artists. Similarly, the therapies used also range from soundly founded methods to pseudo-scientific or even potentially dangerous approaches. And last but not least, the way in which those therapies are presented, applied and followed range from properly attuned to blindly administered to all and again to the potentially dangerous. It is therefore very important that time and effort is spent into telling the ones from the others.

SGU interviews Scott Lilienfield, who is a psychology professor at Emory University and who was one of the editors to the book ' Science and Pseudoscience in Clinical Psychology' and to the magazine 'The Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice'. Lilienfield delivers a talk on the subject and hands an initial expose on this problem. I am very happy with this SGU podcast and hope to learn more.