I was a Speed Racer virgin—until today!

On Pi Day, March 14, 2026, I gave myself an absurdly good gift: I finally started Speed Racer for the first time ever. Total virgin watch. I had never seen it before, not in 2008, not accidentally on cable, not as a background watch, not even enough to have an opinion. Nothing. Clean slate. And within just 8 minutes and 44 seconds, I could already feel the floor tilting.

This was not the “too cartoony” curiosity I had filed away in my head for nearly two decades. This was not some failed kids’ movie with a cult following built out of contrarianism and internet residue. This felt immediate, radical, and uncannily modern, maybe even post-modern in the truest sense: not detached, not smirking, but operating on a whole different grammar of image, motion, emotion, and narrative compression.

I grew up in Hawaii, where Speed Racer had cultural presence, but it never hooked me. Later I lived through entire waves of anime enthusiasm, tech-guy Japanophilia, and imported-culture evangelism without ever feeling called to it. Then the film came and went in 2008 while I was in Berlin, and I ignored it. It looked too synthetic, too loud, too much like something I was not supposed to take seriously.

That now feels like one of the great personal cinematic blind spots of my adult life.

Because in less than nine minutes, I could already see that the Wachowski siblings were doing something wildly ambitious: not trying to make a live-action cartoon “work” by toning it down, but by pushing stylization so far past realism that it became its own new kind of reality. The editing, the color logic, the transitions, the performances, the storybook velocity of it all, it feels engineered rather than merely filmed. It’s like they weren’t adapting a property so much as trying to invent a new visual syntax for mainstream cinema.

And hovering underneath all that candy-colored delirium, I can already sense the thing that really grabs me: the moral architecture. The anti-corporate pulse. The suspicion that competition is managed, spectacle is rigged, and victory is often just a branded form of fate.

So yes, maybe this is ridiculous to declare after only 8 minutes and 44 seconds. But that’s the whole point. When something this alive announces itself that quickly, you pay attention.

Tonight, after work, I go back in.

Virgin watch. Door finally opened. What a way to arrive late.


On Pi Day 2026, I discovered Speed Racer for the first time in my life. Virgin watch. I’m only 8 minutes and 44 seconds in, and I can already tell the hype wasn’t hype. This feels less like “a movie I missed” and more like uncovering a lost pillar of 21st-century cinema.


This is what being a devoted Democrat looked like when I was 25

Bill Clinton on Illegal Immigration at 1995 State of the Union youtube.com/watch


Joe Biden was so obviously more senior and more senile than Donald Trump is that it’s hard to listen to Democrats double down and triple down on the Donald Trump is a senile old man because we’re not comparing it to himself we’re comparing him to Joe Biden.


Mix of guilty verdicts in ICE center ambush trial youtube.com/watch

The nine defendants in an ICE ambush trial were found guilty on a variety of different counts on Friday afternoon.


So sketchy

“News about detention • Sundas (Sunny) Naqvi youtube.com/watch


Question: Why has the media started saying “anti-democratic” instead of “anti-constitutional”? Those don’t mean the same thing. One suggests defying voters; the other suggests violating constitutional limits and lawful order. Why the change in framing?


After hearing that the shooter at the Virginia college was stopped by an ROTC dude with a knife I thought I would share that just about every man in Virginia carries one of these (this is mine) or something like this clipped to their strong side pocket every day of their life. Not just Virginia.


How Social Media, Press Releases, and Website Content Work Together to Build Visibility meritusmedia.com/how-socia…


Press Releases for Local Business: What Works, What’s a Waste, and How to Spot the Difference meritusmedia.com/press-rel…


How Google Decides Which Local Businesses Show Up in Search, and What Small Business Owners Can Do About It meritusmedia.com/how-googl…


Why Your Business Needs a Content and Marketing Strategist meritusmedia.com/why-your-…


Americans think $3.63/gal means gas is going through the roof. Even California ($5.42) and Hawaii ($4.85) are still below Europe: Berlin $7.43, Paris $7.82, Milan $7.73, Rome $7.30, Geneva $8.85, Zurich $8.61, Amsterdam $8.67. Paying nearly nine bucks a gallon? Houd mijn bier.


I assume this is what editors are dealing with right now: autocorrect.


How many cylinders does your life have?

Probability isn’t magical and luck doesn’t build up over time. The world isn’t a slot machine that eventually pays out because your streak is due. Every spin begins fresh. The mechanism doesn’t remember what happened before.

What matters instead is the structure of the wheel.

Imagine a wheel with chambers. Some are empty and one holds the round. Each spin is independent, but the number of empty chambers determines how forgiving the system is. Risk mitigation is essentially the process of adding empty chambers.

A stable routine tends to do that. Going to work, coming home, eating dinner, walking familiar streets, living among known people. None of this eliminates risk, but it spreads the possibilities across more empty spaces. The wheel becomes more forgiving.

Other patterns compress the wheel. When life becomes unstable or unpredictable, the number of empty chambers shrinks. Addiction, chaotic environments, risky encounters, late-night unknowns. There’s no moral judgment in that observation. It simply means the structure of risk has tightened.

If the wheel only has five chambers, then four are empty and one is live. Every spin still resets. Probability still has no memory. But the system contains fewer safe spaces from the beginning.

When things go wrong, people often reach for supernatural explanations. They think fate is against them, that God is punishing them, or that the devil has lured them into a cursed path. But most of the time the explanation is simpler and colder. The structure of the wheel changed.

We all make choices that influence how many chambers exist in our own wheel. Five chambers, six, eight, maybe ten. The more empty chambers there are, the more forgiving the system becomes. The fewer there are, the tighter the odds feel every time the wheel spins.

That isn’t destiny. It isn’t cosmic punishment. It’s risk mitigation, and the geometry of the choices that shape a life.


Probability has no memory. Each spin is fresh. What changes is how many chambers you’ve built into your life. Routine and caution add chambers. Chaotic habits remove them. If the wheel only has five chambers, four are empty and one is live. That isn’t fate or divine punishment. It’s risk mitigation.


Iran: one death was a tragedy; a million will be a statistic.


Turns out people don’t get my humor or jokes. From now on, I will end every post with waka waka.


I think what keeps me so grounded is that I endlessly listen to old Art Bell shows where cataclysms are constantly being predicted (but never happening) and it reminds me that catastrophizing is much more common than catastrophes.


When Virginia’s gun bill looked like 10-round mags with no grandfather clause, I was ready to storm the barricades. Now it looks like 15 rounds and grandfathering… which means my stuff is safe. And just like that, my revolutionary courage has disappeared. My activism was magazine-capacity dependent.