Alan Montecillo
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alanmontecillo.bsky.social
Alan Montecillo
@alanmontecillo.bsky.social
a fil-am from hong kong. podcast editor @kqednews.bsky.social

🎧 kqed.org/thebay
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
People who talk breezily about the U.S. orchestrating "regime change" in China don't have the slightest grasp of even modern Chinese history, much less anything earlier. They live in a fantasy world of DC cocktail circuits.
January 19, 2025 at 3:01 AM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
Reading a summary of a book is cheating. A decent bluffer should be able to pretend to have read a book on the basis of reading the blurb, hearing about it at a dinner party, or just guessing from the title - most of us were doing that for years before this newfangled nonsense came along
I don’t even understand what someone gets out of pretending to have read a book. Like don’t read it if you don’t want too, getting an LLM to make a probably bogus summary is so besides the point.
January 18, 2025 at 7:02 PM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
Why do people keep pretending that there was some unbridgeable barrier between the United States and the People's Republic of China until three days ago? There are absolutely massive cultural and economic connections between the two countries, and have been for decades now.
It’s not just young people reacting to what they’re seeing on Red Note about life in China.

Some of the people that I’ve seen who have most affected are older.

What this man says at the end of the clip below is widely expressed by all ages.

Full video:
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT2JQjEXn/
January 16, 2025 at 11:51 PM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
NEW: Meta has quietly dismantled the system that prevented misinformation from spreading in the United States. Machine-learning classifiers that once identified viral hoaxes and limited their reach have now been switched off, Platformer has learned www.platformer.news/meta-ends-mi...
January 15, 2025 at 12:51 AM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
I am here once again to complain about the enshitification of Google search. Maybe AI will kill us, maybe it’ll save us but meantime, it has taken one of mankind’s greatest accomplishments of last 40 years and ruined it.
December 31, 2024 at 2:44 AM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
There is huge variation in the strength of member stations. A KQED can lean on our community (and our staff) and survive. Small stations will be in really serious trouble.
December 27, 2024 at 5:14 PM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
Meyerson's thesis: corporations & companies have become global, beyond the reach of any national gov't; consequently, inequality has soared & people are unhappy; but people blame national gov'ts, punish democratic leaders, & look to autocrats for solutions. Grim.

prospect.org/world/2024-1...
Think Biden’s Unpopular? Check Out His Fellow Leaders.
If floundering leaders and ineffectual democracies are the new norm, we’re in a very dangerous time.
prospect.org
December 23, 2024 at 8:56 PM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
i think it is very cool that the political press was basically uninterested in the fact that vance is openly adjacent to/pals around with far-right and Nazi-sympathetic maniacs
To those asking, here's Vance's comments.
When news broke that the terrorist in Germany was a Saudi immigrant, Vance implied blame on all immigrants/Muslims.
When it came out that the attacker was an Elon Musk fan, AfD supporter, and anti-Islam, Vance defended AfD.
He's said nothing else about it.
December 21, 2024 at 4:36 PM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
Interesting article about the clash in corporate culture at 7-Eleven, where the Japanese founding family want to take control rather than sell. They value customers more than shareholder value. www.nytimes.com/2024/12/18/b...
A 7-Eleven Heir’s $50 Billion Fight to Keep the Company in the Family
A battle for control of the chain shows how traditional business models embraced by family owners are clashing with a more shareholder-centric approach.
www.nytimes.com
December 21, 2024 at 3:22 AM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
This is why you don’t settle defamation lawsuits by public figures.
December 15, 2024 at 10:57 PM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
Questions today about vaccines might just be a product of their success. Here’s what people should know about six once-common illnesses that vaccines have contained for decades.
Six Childhood Scourges We’ve Forgotten About, Thanks to Vaccines
Most Americans, including doctors, have no memory of the devastating diseases that routinely threatened children until the 1960s.
www.nytimes.com
December 13, 2024 at 5:36 PM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
to add to to this: I want journalists to know there are countless “content creators” using your reporting, misrepresenting it, erasing your existence & profiting from it. i found this podcast that literally PHOTOSHOPPED MY NAME OUT of my own fucking story. are we going to take this shit lying down?
December 13, 2024 at 4:13 AM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
A quote that a veteran Chicago reporter once told me be about newspaper owners that always sticks with me “No one ever bought a bicycle that they didn’t want to ride.”
December 12, 2024 at 11:17 PM
An eventful five years at @kqednews.bsky.social!
December 12, 2024 at 6:36 PM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
“Elon Musk admitted to his biographer that the reason the Hyperloop was announced—even though he had no intention of pursuing it—was to try to disrupt the California high-speed rail project to get in the way of that actually succeeding.” — @parismarx.com in @gizmodo.com gizmodo.com/silicon-vall...
Silicon Valley's Push Into Transportation Has Been a Miserable Failure
The titans of tech brought plenty of disruption to our broken transportation system but delivered little in the way of innovation.
gizmodo.com
November 26, 2024 at 6:34 PM
On today's episode of The Bay: San Francisco's hotel worker strike, which is on its 80th day. www.kqed.org/news/1201748...
In Downtown San Francisco, Hotel Workers Have Been Striking for Months | KQED
KQED’s Farida Jhabvala Romero explains why this dispute has dragged on, and how everyone has a stake in what happens to the city’s hotel industry.
www.kqed.org
December 11, 2024 at 7:25 PM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
Vlado Chernozemski, who assassinated King Alexander I of Yugoslavia, belonged in his youth to a club that was devoted to a game of regicide.

In the game, known as "chess," contestants subtly maneuver into a position that allows them to topple the opponent's monarch.
December 10, 2024 at 3:43 PM
Reposted by Alan Montecillo
unrestricted pardon power is a good example of how the US, by virtue of being one of the first countries to abandon monarchy, retains far more elements of monarchic authority than most nations
December 2, 2024 at 1:54 AM