Tuesday, January 30, 2018

VW Uses Albuquerque for its Dark Experiments

No earthly clue:
Volkswagen has taken responsibility for diesel emissions tests on humans and monkeys amid mounting fury.

VW chief executive Matthias Mueller said the German car maker had "taken first consequences" for the tests.

...VW has suspended its chief lobbyist Thomas Steg, who admitted to knowing in advance about the monkey experiment, which took place in New Mexico in 2014.

...Last week the New York Times reported that EUGT had exposed 10 monkeys to fumes - in an air-tight chamber - from several cars, including a diesel VW Beetle, at a lab in Albuquerque.

...In 2015 VW admitted having fitted "cheat" devices in the US that made its engines appear less polluting than they actually were.

The scandal has cost Volkswagen almost $30bn.

Last month former VW executive Oliver Schmidt was sentenced to seven years in prison in the US and a $400,000 (£293,000) fine after admitting he helped the firm evade clean-air laws.

Sacramento, a Kind of Middle Earth

Hobbit holes and everything:
Oxford University’s foremost J.R.R. Tolkien scholar, Dr. Wesley Kerrigan, is floored by Gerwig’s attention to detail. “The intellectual dexterity expressed in the creation of this, ‘Sacramento’ world…nothing short of masterly,” he says. “I’m fluent in Elvish, which is absolute cake compared to what Gerwig had to undergo to plot out the big blue house, that bridge, and even a parking lot that kids hang out in—unbelievable.”

It’s true, and unsurprising given its scope, that this project has been a lifelong one for Gerwig. “I spent the first 18 years of my life imagining myself in that world of Sacramento,” she says. “I imagined I was playing on those streets, going to a Catholic school, rooting for this fictional basketball team I called the Sacramento Kings. So, when it came down to making the film, it all came very naturally to me, almost as if I’d ‘lived’ it.”

Rickie Lee Jones, in Her Salad Days

Great video!

Secrets are Harder Than Ever to Hide

Fitbits as spy tools:
Twenty-year-old college student Nathan Ruser has an interest in the Syrian conflict and an affinity for maps.

It's this combination that led him to discover the potential security risks posed by fitness app Strava.

On Saturday, the Australian came across a tweet of Strava's global heatmap, which was originally published in November 2017. Ruser noticed lit up in areas in regions of Syria and the Sahara, often not occupied by civilians, that indicated the presence of security forces working out near military bases and other sensitive locations.

Or, is the Idea to Hand Over America’s Communications to the Russians?

Trump the Decider:
Two options laid out by the documents:

The U.S. government pays for and builds the single network — which would be an unprecedented nationalization of a historically private infrastructure.

An alternative plan where wireless providers build their own 5G networks that compete with one another — though the document says the downside is it could take longer and cost more. It argues that one of the “pros” of that plan is that it would cause “less commercial disruption” to the wireless industry than the government building a network.

Between the lines: A source familiar with the documents' drafting says Option 2 is really no option at all: a single centralized network is what's required to protect America against China and other bad actors.

The source said the internal White House debate will be over whether the U.S. government owns and builds the network or whether the carriers bind together in a consortium to build the network, an idea that would require them to put aside their business models to serve the country's greater good.

Why it matters: Option 1 would lead to federal control of a part of the economy that today is largely controlled by private wireless providers. In the memo, the Trump administration likens it to "the 21st century equivalent of the Eisenhower National Highway System" and says it would create a “new paradigm” for the wireless industry by the end of Trump's current term.

Tortoise Travels an Average of 2 Yards a Day

Tallulah:

Makeup Challenges

Saturday, January 27, 2018

"Breaking Bad": The White, Many-Windowed Building

I've always been curious about The White, Many-Windowed Building in "Breaking Bad". I suspect it might be a defunct juvenile-detention facility.

Lately, the "Albuquerque Memories" Facebook group has taken an interest in the building, and may their antiquarian impulses can help settle the question about the building's original purpose. Their members pointed me to "Born Innocent", a 1974 film starring Linda Blair (not long after "The Exorcist"), which features the building (as Linda Blair's 'Kris' runs away from Albuquerque's current juvenile-detention facility).



The full film has several scenes of Albuquerque interest. The runaway scene featuring the white building is at 34:40, there is a nice drive on what might be Broadway Blvd. at 45:40, with suburban scenes too, and the cemetery scenes at 1:22:00 are at Algodones Cemetery.

The Dancing Pig: 1907

And so, Stormy Daniels will be on Jimmy Kimmel after Trump's SOTU:

Sacramento Proud!: St. Francis Girls Respond to "Lady Bird"

Go Greta! Five Academy-Award nominations!

Adriano Celentano & R. Carra - Prisencolinensinainciusol

I really like this stuff! Sort-of ProtoItaloDisco.



Better quality video here.

Adriano Celentano: ahead of his time, by being right in his time.

Vampires

Earth Rings Like a Bell

Walt posts this:

A magnitude 7.9 earthquake in Alaska, reported by the USGS on January 23, 2018 at 4:51 am Eastern Standard Time (EST), caused groundwater levels to spike in Florida as far as 3,800 miles away. Measuring devices in two Florida wells recorded sharp upward and downward spikes as the groundwater oscillated. This phenomenon has been observed in the past, such as after the magnitude 9.0 earthquake off the west coast of northern Sumatra that triggered the devastating tsunami in the Indian Ocean on December 26, 2004. The USGS describes this phenomenon in a fact sheet available here.

Trumpland

We just live there.

If this blogpost is correct, after only ten years, we're back to the excesses of the Housing Bubble. Good luck with that:
Now these perfunctory valuations abound, underpinning tens of billions of dollars of home deals. Sometimes the process is outsourced to India, where companies charge real-estate agents a few dollars to come up with U.S. home values by consulting Google Earth and real-estate websites. BPOs have been used to value collateral in the more than $20 billion of bonds sold by institutional landlords, such as Blackstone’s Invitation Homes Inc., and in the fast-growing business of lending to individual house flippers.

...It’s remarkable how fast we’ve decided to ignore the lessons of the great housing bubble and the subsequent crash. Republicans, of course, never wanted to learn any lessons from the very start, but Wall Street stayed cautious for at least a few years. Now even that’s receding into the rear view mirror, a mere decade after the second-worst recession of the past century.


I'm not nearly as worried as most on the Left about Democratic eagerness to reopen the government. That was Part 1 of a two part drama. The Republicans had seized two hostages, the CHIP kids and the DACA Dreamers. The Democrats got at least the CHIP kids released. In February, the real battle will be joined:
But “someday” isn’t here, and as of 23 January 2018, Schumer’s Democratic Senate looks cowardly and inept to the people most invested in the party’s future. Schumer chose to end the government shutdown without a deal to protect undocumented immigrants. He chose to trust McConnell because the Kentucky Republican promised an immigration vote in the coming weeks.

...There are no serious political consequences for shutting down a government. Republicans did it in 2013, won the Senate in 2014 and the presidency two years later. Arsonists win.

Obstructionism for a moral purpose is noble. Obstructionism for the sake of obstruction – the Republican way under much of Barack Obama’s presidency – is nihilistic.

The progressive wing of the Democratic party and the senators who chose to stand for the Dreamers understand this truth. They know trusting Donald Trump’s Republican party is absurd. They know what they are dealing with.


Baiting Donald Trump's government shutdown trap:
That’s easy: Schumer has figured out that if there’s another government shutdown, it needs to be seen as the Republicans’ fault. So he’s going to negotiate a deal that gives Republicans most of what they want in return for DACA—except for the wall. If they refuse to pass another continuing resolution—or Trump threatens to veto it—because it doesn’t contain funding for the wall, then it’s their fault. Democrats were the voice of sweet reason, but Trump was so obsessed with his stupid wall that he shut down the government over it.

In other words, it’s a trap. It’s also a fairly obvious trap, so the question is how Republicans are going to react to it. We’ll have to wait and see.

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

I'm On Fyah!

Can't See The Forest For The Trees

Too Close to the Black Hole

"The Greatest Showman" and "Hostiles"

With Joe the Plumber tonight, saw a movie (The Greatest Showman) and half a movie (Hostiles).

I notice the girls at DMTC are studying the Greatest Showman soundtrack - very popular with the musical theater crowd. Liked it!

Even though a lot of Hostiles was filmed in New Mexico, I still found it hard to like it much. I noticed they referred to the rainy season as "the monsoons," even though that usage has been popular probably no more than fifty years, or so. At least Jesse Plemons seemed like a decent character here, for once.

Nevertheless, this evening's micro-adventures centered on Step One Health and Fitness Studio. I found myself pressed into service as a tour guide, explaining the various technical features of the Step-One men's bathroom to a curious boy, age about three, who was playing hide-and-seek from his mother (but who was still in voice contact). The three toilet stalls, all different sizes, as if provided by Goldilocks for the Three Bears, was the biggest hit.

I left Step One, but had to return when I discovered I was missing my iPhone, which I eventually found in good working order, stuck in the mud in a gutter on 19th Street, where I had parked earlier.

Good for Kevin McCarty!

Making them pay:
A pair of California lawmakers want to claw back some of steep tax cuts that corporations will receive under the federal tax overhaul signed last month by President Donald Trump.

Democratic Assemblymen Kevin McCarty of Sacramento and Phil Ting of San Francisco announced Thursday that they will pursue a constitutional amendment to add a surcharge on large companies that do business in California, potentially raising billions of dollars to expand social services for Californians.

“We’ve seen enough billionaire justice from the presidency,” McCarty said in an interview. “It’s time for middle class tax justice.”

New Mexico Stumbles Into Zimbabwean Politics

A helicopter crash:
SANTA FE – What was apparently supposed to be a weekend getaway for a former Zimbabwean politician, a wealthy Houston-area businessman and others on a sprawling ranch in northeastern New Mexico turned into tragedy Wednesday evening when their helicopter crashed, killing five and leaving just one survivor.

Five people were killed when this helicopter crashed Wednesday evening about 15 miles east of Raton. One injured passenger survived. (Source: KOAT)

Zimbabwean opposition leader Roy Bennett, 60, and his wife, 55-year-old Heather Bennett, died in the crash about 15 miles east of Raton, State Police have confirmed.

The others who were killed were pilot Jamie Coleman Dodd, 57, of Trinidad, Colo.; co-pilot Paul Cobb, 67, of Conroe, Texas; and wealthy businessman, investor and philanthropist Charles Burnett III, 61, of Houston.

Andra Cobb, Paul Cobb’s daughter and Burnett’s long-term girlfriend, survived and is being treated for burns and broken bones at University of New Mexico Hospital, Burnett’s lawyer confirmed Thursday.

A State Police press release said that Andra Cobb was able to escape the wreckage and called 911 around 6 p.m.

Still Doing Tide Pods?

Monopsony

The REAL problem:
That’s not how things work when competition breaks down and companies can exercise monopsony power. If that happens, businesses may find it’s more profitable to pay workers less than their worth. (Shocking, I know.) But this creates a dilemma for bosses who can’t find any more workers willing to work for low pay. Management can either advertise higher wages, and risk having to bump up its current workers’ earnings as well. Or it can keep advertising the same cruddy wage and end up not hiring anybody. In the textbook models, employers choose the latter—more profits, less staff. (Shocking, I know.) As President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers explained in its brief on monopsony back in 2016, “Economic theory shows that firms with monopsony power have an incentive to employ fewer workers at a lower wage than they would in a competitive labor market. What the monopsonistic firm loses in reduced output and revenue, it more than makes up in reduced costs by paying lower wages.”

Here’s a hypothetical example of how the theory might play out in the real world. Let’s say you manage a small construction company, and you’ve been getting away with paying your crew relatively little because there aren’t that many other contractors posting help-wanted ads in your town. You need a new carpenter. But you don’t want to tick off the rest of your men by offering this new potential employee a more generous wage. So you post the job with the same mediocre hourly rate you’ve offered for the past three years. Nobody good responds, and to you, this looks like there aren’t enough talented carpenters out there. But in reality, there’s only a shortage of people willing to work at the artificially low wage you’ve set your heart on paying. The real problem isn’t a skills shortage, it’s that you aren’t offering market wages, because the market isn’t functioning.

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

Christmas Tree

The Norsemen Cometh

This Wall Street Boom is a Problem

It's due entirely to the tax cut that will explode the national deficit. It's money that's better-used elsewhere and the harbinger of a coming collapse:

Coincidance

Bitcoin: Today's Tulips

Nutso:
Markus’s trades raised many red flags. He never paid transaction fees and reportedly paid seemingly random prices for bitcoins. Most curious of all, we identified many duplicate transactions in which the amount paid was changed from an implausibly random price to one that was consistent with other trades that day. In the end, we have concluded that Markus did not actually pay for the bitcoins he acquired; rather, his account was fraudulently credited with claimed bitcoins that almost certainly were not backed by real coins.

"Post"

Saw this. A little too pat, in the classic Steven Spielberg way, but OK.

Sunday, January 14, 2018

English Beat - Ace of Spades - January 13, 2018


Doors opened an hour late. Glad I wasn’t early! I had an extra ticket. Fortunately Joe the Plumber wasn’t interested in going. Way too gay for him; maybe not gay enough for me. We would see.


Seemed like a happy crowd.





Since I was given the "English Beat" tickets for free, I wanted to give away my extra ticket. I hung around the front door, and failed to connect with several needy people, but I had faith. There's always someone who needs a ticket.

Eventually I was approached by a woman who asked if I had an extra ticket. She had a ticket, but her sister didn't. I brought her sister in. They were sweet and grateful and asked if I wanted money or a drink, but I wanted neither. Just as I had received the tickets, I wanted to give a ticket, freely.

The two sisters were big "English Beat" fans:
W.: English Beat played at my sister’s wedding.

M.: English Beat played at your sister’s wedding?

W.: They’ll play for anyone if you pay them enough.

Later, I saw the woman again. I understood that her name was Tije. I had never heard that name before. "What kind of name is that?" I asked. She explained she was Indian. "What tribe?" I asked. "The tribe from India," she replied. I looked at her blankly. "Oh!" I finally replied. "Now I get it!"

A Sacramento band, "Noche Oskura" opened. Pretty good. Their fans were there.

















The band is releasing their new single from their new album soon. They hinted they will return to Sacramento before 2018 is out. They even suggested next week.

Sharing Tips on the Flu

Cheeto Mussolini Takes A Step Too Far


Saturday, January 13, 2018

Michael Manley - A Life in Theatre! (Part 3)

Following up my first and second blogposts.


Jekyll and Hyde: The Musical - September 7, 2017 - Poole, Jekyll's manservant (Mike Manley) and Utterson, lawyer and friend of Henry Jekyll (Scott Minor).


DMTC, Shenandoah, November 1992. (From a caption in the Woodland Daily Democrat (Nov. 19, 1992): Charlie Anderson (Michael Manley) consoles his daughter Jenny (Julie Bock) when hope of finding the youngest son seems lost. The son was kidnapped by Union soldiers. — with Mike Manley and Julie Bock Thompson in Davis, California.


DMTC, "Kiss Me Kate," 1995. Katharine (Dawn Roe), Harry Trevor (Mike Mike Manley), Petruchio (John Chitambar), Gangster #1 (Steve Isaacson), and Gangster #2 (Mark Fejta). — with Mike Manley, Steve Isaacson and Mark Fejta at Varsity Theatre.


DMTC, "La Cage aux Folles," December 31, 2007, Bioboard post — with Mike Manley at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


DMTC, "Carousel," November 13, 2009, Bioboard post — with Mike Manley.


DMTC, "Les Miserables," June 27, 2014, Bioboard post — with Mike Manley.


DMTC, "Into the Woods," November 12, 2015 — with Eimi Taormina, F. James Raasch, Jori Gonzales, Nancy Jones Streeter, Tony Ruiz, Mike Manley, Elysse Endter, Cyndi Kreafle Wall and Patrick McCann.


DMTC, "Into the Woods," November 11, 2015 — with John Ewing, Nancy Jones Streeter and Mike Manley in Davis, California.



DMTC's "Into the Woods," November 12, 2015. Cinderella (Jori Gonzales), Witch (Eimi Taormina), and Cinderella's Father (Mike Manley). — with McKinley Anne Carlisle, Josh Endter, Jori Gonzales, Cyndi Kreafle Wall, Eimi Taormina, F. James Raasch, Mike Manley, Ashley Marie, Patrick McCann, Josh Smith and Dannette Vassar at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


DMTC, "Les Miserables" (Performance picture), June 29, 2014 — with Jan Donowitz Isaacson, Gabe Avila, Dannette Vassar, Eimi Taormina, Scott Daugherty, Scott Scholes, Mike Manley, Andy Hyun, Ryan Favorite, Jeff Nauer, Mary Young, Kaylin Davis Scott and Hugo Figueroa Rojo at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


Mike Manley as Baptista and Martin Lehman as Petrucchio in DMTC's "Kiss Me Kate," February 24, 2010 — with Mike Manley at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


Mike Manley as Baptista and Martin Lehman as Petrucchio in DMTC's "Kiss Me Kate," February 24, 2010 — with Mike Manley at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


Mike Manley as Baptista and Martin Lehman as Petrucchio in DMTC's "Kiss Me Kate," February 24, 2010 — with Mike Manley at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


Mike Manley as Baptista and Martin Lehman as Petrucchio in DMTC's "Kiss Me Kate," February 24, 2010 — with Mike Manley at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


Mike Manley as Baptista and Martin Lehman as Petrucchio in DMTC's "Kiss Me Kate," February 24, 2010 — with Mike Manley at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


Mike Manley as Baptista and Martin Lehman as Petrucchio in DMTC's "Kiss Me Kate," February 25, 2010 — with Mike Manley at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


Mike Manley as Baptista and Martin Lehman as Petrucchio in DMTC's "Kiss Me Kate," February 25, 2010 — with Mike Manley at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


Mike Manley as Baptista and Martin Lehman as Petrucchio in DMTC's "Kiss Me Kate," February 25, 2010 — with Mike Manley at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


Martin Lehman as Petrucchio and Mike Manley as Baptista in DMTC's "Kiss Me Kate," February 26, 2010 — with Martin Lehman and Mike Manley at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


Mike Manley as Baptista in DMTC's "Kiss Me Kate," February 26, 2010. — with Mike Manley at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


Mike Manley as Baptista and Martin Lehman as Petrucchio in DMTC's "Kiss Me Kate," February 26, 2010 — with Mike Manley and Martin Lehman at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).


Mike Manley as Baptista and Martin Lehman as Petrucchio in DMTC's "Kiss Me Kate," February 26, 2010 — with Mike Manley and Martin Lehman at Davis Musical Theatre Company (DMTC).

Great Pictures!

Courtesy of Kate. The anticyclonic tornado picture is to die for!:
Grand Prize and Nature Winner. Jaw-dropping, rare anti-cyclonic tornado tracks in open farmland narrowly missing a home near Simla, Colorado, on June 5, 2015

Having Trump as President Costs Us International Power

Strangely, the supposedly-liberal media have mostly not discussed how Kim Jong Un completely-won his recent squabbles with Donald Trump. Kim got exactly what he wanted and the United States got nothing. Reporting on this inconvenient result is probably just too awkward for the press, but the event didn't go unnoticed. Vladimir Putin, for one, took note:
Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was “shrewd and mature” and had won the latest standoff with the West over his nuclear and missile programs.

“I think that Mr Kim Jong Un has obviously won this round. He has completed his strategic task: he has a nuclear weapon, he has missiles of global reach, up to 13,000 km, which can reach almost any point of the globe,” Putin told Russian journalists at a televised meeting.

I Decided I Needed to Watch AMC's 2009 Remake of "The Prisoner"

I like this Village poster:

Thought-Provoking Article on Extraterrestrial Water

By none other than old classmate, Michael Zolensky!:
Organic matter in extraterrestrial water-bearing salt crystals

Queenie H. S. Chan, Michael E. Zolensky, Yoko Kebukawa, Marc Fries, Motoo Ito, Andrew Steele, Zia Rahman, Aiko Nakato, A. L. David Kilcoyne, Hiroki Suga, Yoshio Takahashi, Yasuo Takeichi and Kazuhiko Mase.

Abstract

Direct evidence of complex prebiotic chemistry from a water-rich world in the outer solar system is provided by the 4.5-billion-year-old halite crystals hosted in the Zag and Monahans (1998) meteorites. This study offers the first comprehensive organic analysis of the soluble and insoluble organic compounds found in the millimeter-sized halite crystals containing brine inclusions and sheds light on the nature and activity of aqueous fluids on a primitive parent body. Associated with these trapped brines are organic compounds exhibiting wide chemical variations representing organic precursors, intermediates, and reaction products that make up life’s precursor molecules such as amino acids. The organic compounds also contain a mixture of C-, O-, and N-bearing macromolecular carbon materials exhibiting a wide range of structural order, as well as aromatic, ketone, imine, and/or imidazole compounds. The enrichment in 15N is comparable to the organic matter in pristine Renazzo-type carbonaceous chondrites, which reflects the sources of interstellar 15N, such as ammonia and amino acids. The amino acid content of the Zag halite deviates from the meteorite matrix, supporting an exogenic origin of the halite, and therefore, the Zag meteorite contains organics synthesized on two distinct parent bodies. Our study suggests that the asteroidal parent body where the halite precipitated, potentially asteroid 1 Ceres, shows evidence for a complex combination of biologically and prebiologically relevant molecules.

One Reason Aussie Fires Spread So Readily

Frickin' arsonists:
[S]o-called 'firehawk raptors' – birds that intentionally spread fire by wielding burning sticks in their talons and beaks. ... These flying firestarters are spread across at least three known species – the Black Kite (Milvus migrans), Whistling Kite (Haliastur sphenurus), and Brown Falcon (Falco berigora)....

..."Most of the data that we've worked with is collaborative with Aboriginal peoples… They've known this for probably 40,000 years or more."

According to the team, firehawk raptors congregate in hundreds along burning fire fronts, where they will fly into active fires to pick up smouldering sticks, transporting them up to a kilometre (0.6 miles) away to regions the flames have not yet scorched.

"The imputed intent of raptors is to spread fire to unburned locations – for example, the far side of a watercourse, road, or artificial break created by firefighters – to flush out prey via flames or smoke," the researchers write.

This behaviour, documented in interviews with the team and observed first-hand by some of the researchers, sees prey driven toward the raptors by a wall of flame, enabling them to engage in a feeding frenzy upon fleeing or scorched land animals.

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

Michael Manley - A Life in Theatre! (Part 2)

Following up my previous blogpost:


DMTC, "La Cage aux Folles," December 29, 2007 — with Martin Lehman, Kris Farhood, Monica Parisi, Mike Manley and Clocky McDowell.


DMTC, "La Cage aux Folles," December 29, 2007 — with Kris Farhood, Mike Manley and Monica Parisi.



DMTC, "La Cage aux Folles," December 30, 2007 — with Clocky McDowell, Kris Farhood, Monica Parisi, and Mike Manley.



DMTC, "La Cage aux Folles," December 30, 2007 — with Martin Lehman, Mike Manley, Kris Farhood, and Monica Parisi.



DMTC, "La Cage aux Folles," December 30, 2007 — with Clocky McDowell, Kris Farhood, Monica Parisi, Mike Manley and Martin Lehman.



DMTC, "La Cage aux Folles," December 30, 2007 — with Monica Parisi, Mike Manley, Martin Lehman, Kris Farhood, and Clocky McDowell.


DMTC, "La Cage aux Folles," December 30, 2007 — with Kris Farhood, Martin Lehman, Monica Parisi, Mike Manley, and Nic Candito.


DMTC, "La Cage aux Folles," December 30, 2007 — with Ryan Adame, Mike Manley, Kris Farhood, and Monica Parisi.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 9, 2012 — with Joel Porter, Shane Osterhoudt and Mike Manley.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with R. Douglas Barbieri, Mike Manley, and Rich Kulmann.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with R. Douglas Barbieri, Bryan Pro, Mike Manley, and Rich Kulmann.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with R. Douglas Barbieri, Mark Deamer, and Mike Manley.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with R. Douglas Barbieri, Mark Deamer, Mike Manley and Bryan Pro.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with R. Douglas Barbieri and Amber Jean Moore.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with R. Douglas Barbieri and Amber Jean Moore.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012. — with Mike Manley.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Scott Minor and Mike Manley.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012. — Titanic survivors on the Carpathia, with Rebecca Wilson, Steve Mo, Mike Manley, Laura Sitts and Adam Sartain.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Joel Porter, Adam Sartain, Shane Osterhoudt, R. Douglas Barbieri, Kyle Hadley and Mike Manley.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Mike Manley, David Ewey, Steve Mo, Stacy Sheehan, Ashlyn Marie Barbieri and Carrie Ceniseroz Rothman.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Mike Manley.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Mike Manley.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Mike Manley and Ashlyn Marie Barbieri.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Mike Manley, Steve Mo and Stacy Sheehan.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Mary Young, Mike Manley, Bryan Pro, Jan Donowitz Isaacson, Laura Sitts, Ashlyn Marie Barbieri, Richard Kulmann and Dannette Vassar.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Anthony Swaminathan, R. Douglas Barbieri, Bryan Pro and Mike Manley.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with R. Douglas Barbieri, Mike Manley and Bryan Pro.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Jan Donowitz Isaacson, Dannette Vassar, Elizabeth Fernandez, Mike Manley and R. Douglas Barbieri.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Dan Mason, Mike Manley, Travis Nagler and Jabriel Daniels Shelton.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Joel Porter, Shane Osterhoudt and Mike Manley.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Joel Porter, Shane Osterhoudt and Mike Manley.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Steve Mo, Mike Manley, Mary Young and Dannette Vassar.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Steve Mo, Mike Manley, Mary Young and Dannette Vassar.


DMTC, "Titanic," April 11, 2012 — with Mike Manley, Dannette Vassar, Jenny Plasse and Hannah Wallace.


DMTC's "Into the Woods," November 15, 2015. Baker (Tony Ruiz), Cinderella's Father (Mike Manley), Witch (Eimi Taormina), and Court Steward (Patrick McCann).