Saturday, June 6, 2026

In Detail: Types of Popcorn

My father got involved in hybrid new popcorns in the 1940s in college in Ames, ISU.


That fits perfectly with the great mid-century American agricultural-industrial story — and Iowa State University was one of the epicenters of it.

The early 1950s were exactly the era when:

  • hybrid seed science,

  • mechanized agriculture,

  • food processing,

  • storage technology,

  • and national branding

were all converging into the modern American food system.

Hybrid popcorn sounds quaint today, but it was actually high technology:

  • optimizing popping expansion,

  • moisture behavior,

  • kernel uniformity,

  • disease resistance,

  • harvesting characteristics,

  • shipping durability,

  • and flavor/texture.

And popcorn itself is another example of “simple product, hidden systems.”

People think:

corn + heat = popcorn.

But commercial popcorn depends on:

  • genetics,

  • drying conditions,

  • precise kernel moisture,

  • storage,

  • packaging,

  • oil chemistry,

  • theater equipment,

  • distribution chains.

A bad hybrid might:

  • pop unevenly,

  • leave too many old maids,

  • shatter during handling,

  • lose moisture too quickly,

  • or stale badly.

The postwar Midwest — Ames included — was full of this kind of quietly transformative work. Not glamorous like rockets or atomic physics, but it reshaped daily American life just as profoundly. Your father was participating in the engineering of ordinary life.

####

####

There were special popcorns. Elaborate puffs for cinema. Smooth round puffs for Carmel corn.

Exactly — and that’s where popcorn stops being “just corn” and becomes a specialized industrial crop with distinct engineered phenotypes.

Different popcorn hybrids were bred for very different expansion geometries and commercial uses.

The two classic popping forms are:

  • Butterfly (snowflake) popcorn

    • irregular, branching, fluffy shapes

    • large apparent volume

    • catches butter and salt well

    • visually dramatic

    • preferred for movie theaters

  • Mushroom popcorn

    • round, compact balls

    • sturdier surface

    • less fragile in tumbling/coating

    • ideal for caramel corn, kettle corn, and packaged popcorn

Your father’s era — early 1950s Iowa — was right when breeders and processors were learning to optimize these commercially important traits systematically.

For cinema operators, the ideal popcorn was:

  • huge expansion ratio,

  • fluffy appearance,

  • dramatic bucket fill,

  • aroma dispersion,

  • low percentage of unpopped kernels.

For caramel corn manufacturers, those same fluffy wings were a disaster:

  • they broke apart,

  • generated crumbs,

  • coated unevenly,

  • and packed poorly.

So mushroom popcorn became valuable because it behaved more like a durable substrate for industrial coating. The caramel could tumble evenly around spherical pieces without shattering them.

This is one of those hidden examples of American industrial specialization:

even the shape of popcorn became an engineered commercial property.

And it parallels your earlier chocolate insight. Consumers see:

  • candy,

  • popcorn,

  • frozen peas,

  • light bulbs.

Behind each is an invisible century-long optimization project involving genetics, machinery, logistics, chemistry, and marketing.


###

What are the five or six major types of popcorn

###


 Popcorn has several overlapping classification systems:

  • kernel color (yellow, white, red, blue, etc.)

  • popping shape (butterfly vs mushroom)

  • hybrid lineage

  • commercial use (theater, caramel, microwave, gourmet)

But in ordinary American commerce, the major practical categories are something like these:

1. Yellow butterfly popcorn

The classic American movie-theater popcorn.



Characteristics:

  • large fluffy expansion

  • irregular “wings”

  • dramatic bucket fill

  • strong corn flavor

  • good butter adhesion

Usually derived from robust yellow hybrids developed for high expansion and durability.

This became the dominant commercial popcorn partly because:

  • it looked big and exciting,

  • it survived handling,

  • and yellow kernels often yielded larger-looking pops.


2. White butterfly popcorn

More delicate and refined-looking.



Characteristics:

  • smaller, whiter popped flakes

  • often more tender

  • thinner hulls

  • subtler corn flavor

Historically associated with:

  • home popping,

  • “premium” popcorn,

  • less tooth-hull residue.

Some people strongly prefer white popcorn because it feels less coarse.


3. Mushroom popcorn

The caramel-corn and industrial coating popcorn.


Characteristics:

  • compact spherical shape

  • durable structure

  • ideal for tumbling and coating

This is the workhorse of:

  • caramel corn,

  • cheese popcorn,

  • packaged flavored popcorn.


4. Hulless / tender popcorn

A marketing category rather than truly hull-free.


Bred for:

  • thinner hull fragments,

  • easier chewing,

  • fewer bits stuck in teeth.

Often overlaps with white popcorn strains.


5. Colored heirloom popcorns

Red, blue, purple, black, multicolor.


Usually:

  • smaller-scale,

  • gourmet,

  • novelty,

  • heritage-oriented.

Many pop white despite dark kernels.


6. Microwave popcorn hybrids

A modern category optimized for:

  • microwave timing,

  • oil interaction,

  • bag chemistry,

  • steam pressure behavior.

Not necessarily visually distinctive, but highly engineered.


The yellow vs white story is partly:

psychology + agronomy + texture

Yellow popcorn

  • heartier

  • larger-looking

  • more robust

  • “classic popcorn” aroma

  • ideal for commercial theaters

Yellow popcorn visually signals abundance and spectacle.

White popcorn

  • more delicate

  • more tender

  • perceived as refined

  • often preferred by enthusiasts

White popcorn has something like the role of white bread vs rustic bread flipped upside down:

less coarse, more elegant.

The great irony:
Most popped popcorn — yellow or white — ends up looking mostly white anyway. The kernel color mainly affects:

  • flavor nuance,

  • hull properties,

  • expansion characteristics,

  • and subtle appearance cues.

Your father’s generation in Ames was working right in the era when these distinctions became scientific breeding targets rather than folk farming traditions.

Humor: Academic Comparison of HAIL MARY and CAST AWAY (Ryan Gosling, Tom Hanks)

 Wilson and Rocky:
Companionship, Consciousness, and the Limits of Human Isolation
in Cast Away and Project Hail Mary



The comparison between Wilson, the volleyball companion in Cast Away, and Rocky, the alien engineer in Project Hail Mary and its forthcoming film adaptation, initially appears comic or superficial. One is an inanimate sporting good marked with a bloody handprint; the other is an intelligent extraterrestrial capable of advanced scientific reasoning. Yet both function within structurally similar narrative systems. Each emerges as a response to radical isolation, psychological fragmentation, and the existential instability of the solitary human subject. The two figures therefore illuminate a deeper continuity in survival narratives: the human mind’s inability to remain wholly alone.

Wilson and Rocky occupy analogous narrative positions despite their ontological differences. Both appear after prolonged isolation. In Cast Away, Chuck Noland’s psychological disintegration begins almost immediately after civilization disappears. Language itself begins to decay in usefulness. Wilson arises not as fantasy but as compensatory cognition — an externalized consciousness allowing Chuck to preserve dialogue, ritual, and social structure. Wilson is thus less a “character” than a prosthetic for subjectivity. Chuck speaks to Wilson because human thought itself is dialogic. The self requires response, even if invented.

Rocky performs a related but more advanced role in Project Hail Mary. Ryland Grace also confronts catastrophic solitude: awakening alone in interstellar space beside the corpses of his crewmates. Yet unlike Chuck, Grace encounters an authentic Other. Rocky is conscious, autonomous, technologically sophisticated, and morally intelligible. The relationship therefore evolves beyond projection into reciprocity. Nevertheless, Rocky first enters the narrative at precisely the point where isolation threatens psychic collapse. The structural function remains parallel: both Wilson and Rocky interrupt existential void.

The philosophical implications of this distinction are profound. Wilson reveals the mind’s capacity to anthropomorphize matter under conditions of deprivation. Rocky reveals the possibility that consciousness itself may transcend species, biology, and culture. Wilson is fundamentally a mirror. Rocky is fundamentally a bridge.

This difference maps onto two traditions within modern storytelling. Cast Away belongs to the Robinson Crusoe lineage: the stripped-down human confronting nature and reconstructing civilization from minimal materials. Wilson emerges from absence. Rocky, by contrast, belongs to the tradition of speculative encounter literature, in which alien intelligence becomes a means of interrogating human identity. Yet both narratives converge on the same anthropological claim: intelligence without companionship becomes unstable.

Importantly, Wilson and Rocky also represent different stages in the evolution of cinematic and literary companionship. Wilson is pre-technological companionship reduced to symbolic essence. He possesses no agency whatsoever. Every emotional response originates within Chuck himself. The audience knowingly participates in the illusion. The extraordinary achievement of Robert Zemeckis’s direction is that Wilson eventually acquires emotional reality despite lacking all objective consciousness. When Wilson drifts away at sea, viewers experience genuine grief for an object incapable of awareness. This grief exposes a startling fact about human emotional architecture: emotional attachment depends less upon the intrinsic qualities of the companion than upon the relational structure formed around it.

Rocky radicalizes this structure by introducing mutuality. Rocky not only responds but cares. He learns language, shares risk, and develops affection. Unlike Wilson, Rocky can surprise the protagonist. Their friendship therefore approaches Martin Buber’s conception of the “I-Thou” relationship: an encounter with another consciousness treated not instrumentally but reverently. Grace initially relates to Rocky through scientific curiosity, but the relationship evolves into ethical commitment. Friendship becomes stronger than mission protocol or species loyalty.

Yet Rocky also preserves traces of Wilson’s symbolic function. Like Wilson, Rocky stabilizes the protagonist psychologically through routine conversation and collaborative labor. Both narratives therefore suggest that cognition itself may be inherently cooperative. Thought becomes healthier and more coherent when externalized through dialogue. This may explain why both works devote extraordinary narrative attention to procedural problem-solving. Chuck survives by talking through tasks with Wilson. Grace survives by reasoning collaboratively with Rocky. In each case, companionship enables cognition.

There is also an illuminating contrast in tone. Cast Away is fundamentally tragicomic. Wilson’s absurdity intensifies the loneliness because the audience recognizes the desperation underlying the attachment. The volleyball is pathetic precisely because it is inadequate. Rocky, however, fulfills the fantasy Wilson cannot: the companion who truly answers back. In this sense, Project Hail Mary may be understood as a utopian revision of the Cast Away scenario. What if isolation were interrupted not by illusion, but by genuine communion?

The historical context of the two works further sharpens the comparison. Released in 2000, Cast Away emerged at the threshold of the hyperconnected digital age. Ironically, it dramatized fears of absolute disconnection just as permanent online connectivity was becoming culturally dominant. Wilson became iconic partly because modern audiences increasingly feared solitude. Project Hail Mary, written during the twenty-first century’s era of scientific globalization and collaborative technological optimism, reflects a different anxiety: not merely loneliness, but species-level vulnerability. Rocky therefore represents not only friendship but interdependence across civilizations.

The contrast may finally be framed in theological or metaphysical terms. Wilson is created in Chuck’s image. Rocky confronts Grace with true alterity. Wilson confirms human loneliness. Rocky transcends it.

And yet both companions reveal the same essential truth: survival is not merely biological. Humans require relational existence. Even stranded on an island or drifting between stars, consciousness seeks dialogue. Wilson and Rocky therefore function not as side characters but as embodiments of a fundamental human condition. The isolated self inevitably creates, discovers, or imagines companionship because identity itself is relational at its core.

If Wilson is the minimum viable companion, Rocky is the maximal fulfillment of that longing. Between them lies an entire philosophy of loneliness.

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Hamlet 2: The Timeshare at Elsinore

 Hamlet; or, The Timeshare at Elsinore

A Counterfactual Interlude in One Scene

[Midnight. Battlements of Elsinore. Fog. Enter HAMLET and the GHOST of the late king. The ghost beckons dramatically.]



HAMLET
Speak! I shall follow thee unto the cliff, the sea, the very jaws of hell—

GHOST
Softly, softly. Not so loud.
Come over here by the cannon where thy uncle cannot hear us.

[They shuffle awkwardly to one side of the stage.]

HAMLET
Alas, poor father! Murder most foul—

GHOST
Oh, nobody murdered me.

HAMLET
…What?

GHOST
Nobody murdered me.
I am not dead.

HAMLET
You are extremely translucent.

GHOST
It is a stage effect. The court astrologer discovered phosphorus paint.
Look — touch my sleeve.

HAMLET
…By heaven, thou art solid.

GHOST
Of course I am solid. I’m hiding in a fishing village near Malmö.

HAMLET
But the serpent—! The poison poured within the ear—!

GHOST
That was improvisation. Your uncle is not clever under pressure.

HAMLET
Then why proclaim thyself dead?!

GHOST
Because, my son, I was ruined.

HAMLET
Ruined?

GHOST
At first, small matters. Dice. Falcon racing. Imported Venetian marzipan.
Then certain “investment opportunities.”

HAMLET
What opportunities?

GHOST
Vacation condominiums in the Baltic.

HAMLET
I do not understand these words.

GHOST
Neither did I. That was the difficulty.

HAMLET
You lost the treasury of Denmark… upon seaside lodgings?

GHOST
“Fractional castle ownership.”
The pamphlet was most persuasive.
“Eight guaranteed weeks annually in scenic Lübeck.”

HAMLET
Father, Lübeck is not scenic.

GHOST
I know that now.

HAMLET
But why counterfeit death?

GHOST
Because creditors are reluctant to pursue the deceased.
Also, the scheme included an infinity pool which, in retrospect, ought to have warned me.

HAMLET
O God.

GHOST
Further complications arose when I leveraged the crown jewels to acquire adjoining spa rights.

HAMLET
The state is rotten indeed.

GHOST
Precisely why I require thy assistance.

HAMLET
Command me.

GHOST
Thou must pretend to avenge me.

HAMLET
Pretend?

GHOST
Loudly. Publicly. With flourishes.
Distract the court while I liquidate remaining assets and flee to Portugal.

HAMLET
Portugal?

GHOST
Excellent weather. Low cost of living. No extradition treaty.
Now listen carefully.
Tomorrow night thou shalt stage a play accusing thy uncle of murder.

HAMLET
But he committed none!

GHOST
No, but he embezzled from the wine cellar for years and frankly deserves some stress.

HAMLET
This is monstrous.

GHOST
Also, I need thee to forge my signature transferring the western fjords to a gentleman named Klaus.

HAMLET
Who is Klaus?

GHOST
I pray thee ask no further questions.

HAMLET
Father… this whole affair seemeth less like destiny and more like tax evasion.

GHOST
A prince must learn that kingdoms are founded upon many things.

HAMLET
Honor? Duty? Providence?

GHOST
Creative accounting.

[A pause.]

HAMLET
One question more.
Why appear as a ghost at all?

GHOST
Because if I simply walked back into the castle everyone would ask about the funeral buffet, and that would become awkward.

[Trumpets within.]

GHOST
I must away. Dawn approaches, and I have a ferry to catch.

HAMLET
Stay! Tell me at least whether there truly is an afterlife!

GHOST
I know not. But there is definitely a lawsuit in Copenhagen.

[Exit GHOST hurriedly, dropping several property brochures.]

HAMLET
“To buy, or not to buy…”
Ay, there’s the rub


Monday, June 1, 2026

DÖBLIN: His Misadventures in Hollywood

 


Alfred Döblin was a refugee writer in Hollywood during WW2.  Known for his 1929 novel, Berlin Alexanderplatz (an underworld of prostitutes, criminals, addicts), he struggled to obtain script commissions in California.

##

 Alfred Döblin Goes Hollywood (1942)

Unlike fellow German émigrés such as Thomas Mann and Bertolt Brecht, Alfred Döblin struggled financially in Los Angeles. Living in a tiny bungalow in a modest section of Hollywood, the physician, psychiatrist, and novelist sought work in the movie business.

At his first meeting with a studio producer, Döblin pitches a gritty drama set in Hell's Kitchen, New York. The story follows two morphine addicts, two prostitutes, and one prostitute who is also a morphine addict as they drift through a maze of doomed romances, petty crimes, and mutual betrayals. Their lives intersect in flophouses, cheap cafés, and police stations, ending in disappointment for nearly everyone involved. The producer summarizes it as "Berlin Alexanderplatz meets Midnight Cowboy" and points out that America might be looking for something a little more contemporary and optimistic.

Several weeks later, Döblin returns with a revised idea. This time the action has been moved to Santa Monica, California. Two morphine addicts, two prostitutes, and one prostitute who is also a morphine addict spend their days wandering the beach, getting mixed up with carnival operators, amateur fortune tellers, and dubious real-estate schemes. A stolen jetski, a mistaken identity involving a lifeguard, and a disastrous attempt to start a beachfront nightclub straight out of Cabaret lead the group into a series of calamities. The producer stares at him and says, "Berlin Alexanderplatz meets...Gidget?"

Looking through Döblin's résumé, the producer notices that he is also a physician and psychiatrist.

"Medical stories always sell," the producer says. "Can you write a medical drama?"

Döblin eagerly agrees.

A few weeks later he returns with a new treatment. 

The hero is a physician working in a Santa Monica emergency room. He lives in an apartment with two prostitutes and, unfortunately, he is also a morphine addict. To avoid eviction, he convinces his suspicious landlord that he is gay and merely sharing the apartment as a platonic arrangement. The doctor spends each episode trying to conceal his addiction, his roommates' occupations, his heterosexuality -- all while dodging a rotating collection of eccentric hospital patients that he carts home. By an astonishing coincidence, Döblin has independently invented the exact premise of the future television sitcom Three's Company thirty-five years ahead of schedule.

The producer finally brightens.

"This," he says, sliding the treatment into his briefcase to take home, "may actually have possibilities."

"We'll call you."

 ###

--

Earlier remarks by me on Döblin here.

Sunday, May 31, 2026

DÖBLIN: Poet and Doctor; Novelist; Author of Berin Alexanderplatz; Parkinson's

 

DÖBLIN POET AND DOCTOR


 

Alfred Döblin was a German psychiatrist as well as novelist (Berlin Alexanderplatz, 1929).   He had a colorful and difficult life.   He fled the Nazis to France and escaped around 1940 to the U.S. where he lived unhappily in Hollywood and knew other refugees like Brecht.  In about 1946, Döblin headed rapidly back to Germany.  His last decade, about 1947-1957, was also difficult.  Increasingly forgotten, he lived in both Germany and France but after 1952 was increasingly disabled by Parkinson’s and other illnesses.  He did, however, live to the advanced age of 78.  1878-1957. 

 

This is one passage he left behind re: Parkinson’s disease.

Since this affliction seized me and carries me off into the darkness like a tiger carrying away a deer; since my legs and my hands now hang from me almost uselessly; since my voice fails me more and more, and more and more craters of wounds open within me—since then, from time to time, I look out the window…

There in Paris at the iron metro overpass, but my attention no longer belongs to the world outside. It belongs nowhere—or perhaps somewhere I cannot name.

Memory grows dim. Thoughts seem less my own than visitors moving through me, and I let them come and go.

In sleep there arise dreamlike oases, islands of existence in a desert, experiences in which I take part. Recently these visions have shone with a happiness unlike any I had ever known. It seemed to me that I had passed beyond the frontier of life and entered another realm of being. Does life end with death? Death, I felt, is merely an empty word.

And below is a Chat GPT translation of his two-page essay in which Döblin the doctor discusses Döblin the poet, and vice-versa.

 

TLDR

This essay below is a witty self-portrait split into two mock interviews: “Dr. Döblin” dismisses “the poet Döblin” as obscure, overly difficult, politically confusing, and not worth much attention; then “the poet Döblin” visits “Dr. Döblin” and finds him a hard-working, anonymous Berlin panel doctor, almost the poet’s opposite — not a prima donna, but “a gray soldier in a quiet army.”

The joke is that Döblin stages his own divided identity: doctor versus writer, public literary ego versus ordinary clinical laborer, observer versus observed.

 

 

 

The Neurologist Döblin on the Poet Döblin

As a physician, the poet who bears my name is known to me only from a great distance. To speak honestly, he is really not known to me at all. I have a medium-sized, not overly large, panel medical practice in eastern Berlin; I am a neurologist/psychiatrist, and during the day I am reasonably occupied with that.

My literary inclinations are not great. Books bore me considerably. As for the books by the man who, as you say, bears my name, I have occasionally picked them up at acquaintances’ houses; but what I saw there was completely foreign to me and also totally indifferent. This gentleman seems to have a great imagination, but I cannot go along with it. My income permits me neither trips to India nor to China. And so I cannot check up on what he writes. Besides, I prefer to read such things in the original — namely, actual travel descriptions, of which, incidentally, I am a great lover.

Nor can I do anything with this gentleman — I mean the author who has the same name as I do — because of his style. He is simply too difficult for me. One cannot ask exhausted people to work their way through such things voluntarily.

Permit me, by the way, a general remark that may sound somewhat political or ethical. More than this author’s books, I know his occasional public statements, which my newspaper brings me — and of course I read my newspaper. I must confess, I cannot make sense of the man, politically or generally. My appetite to get to know him does not grow after these statements. Sometimes he seems definitely to stand on the left, even very far left — left squared, so to speak. Then again he utters sentences that are either thoughtless, which is quite impermissible in a man of his age, or else he acts as though he stood above the parties, smiling in poetic arrogance.

In short: it was you, Mr. Editor, who asked me for my opinion about the author, the man with the red rose. The accidental coincidence of names led you to do so. I myself would never have concerned myself with him, any more than with the other young authors. And I say once more, briefly: the gentleman is almost unknown to me; he does not interest me; I am related to him neither by blood nor by marriage; and I calmly await his judgment of me, since you have informed me that you intend to question him about me as well. His apparently humorous attacks will not touch me.

The Poet Döblin on the Neurologist Döblin

I am very grateful to you, Mr. Editor, although at Easter, as you can imagine, I have all sorts of things to suffer from — questionnaires and so on — that you have put this curious question to me and, in a certain respect, enriched my knowledge.

I am just now occupied with a Berlin novel — I mean, an epic work in normal language — dealing with eastern Berlin, the area around Alexanderplatz and the Rosenthaler Tor. So your request that I comment on the neurologist/psychiatrist of my name was an interesting hint. Perhaps I can get some more material there, I thought — not only from the Salvation Army, the cattle yard, and criminal files.

So I went there, and I will report to you. The gentleman makes a lively and not at all bad impression. I was at his office hours; I sat in his waiting room. Such a waiting room is the strangest milieu one can imagine. And when I introduced myself to the gentleman and we had laughed at each other — we come, God knows, from the most different regions — he told me many things, which, with his permission, I immediately wrote down.

These panel doctors are not to be envied. I saw the peculiar, intensely pressured work in which he moved, and with especially constituted patients besides. I am convinced he is no special specimen in this branch, but precisely the way he worked there anonymously pleased me quite a bit. He is my exact opposite, it occurred to me in passing, as he handled things matter-of-factly, spoke, paid attention: I am always a solo dancer, a prima donna, as my publisher once said; he is a gray soldier in a quiet army.

I am convinced I made no particular impression on my namesake. Several times I grew quite anxious when he looked at me with a psychotherapeutic gaze. I have all sorts of defects, probably complexes, and the old hand there likely smelled something of the sort. Please do not be angry with me if I confess to you that for this reason I did not deepen my knowledge or my acquaintance with this namesake very much.

Honestly speaking, I did not feel very comfortable sitting in the chair opposite him; too many unpleasant things come to mind there. But I retain a good memory of the slender, not tall man with the doctor’s spectacles, and I would actually be pleased if you would tell me what this anonymous man — to whom I was surely not an author, but merely a human being — told you about me.

 

Friday, May 29, 2026

CAP Publishes New Guidance on Measuring, Managing A.P. Errors

 

 

Dintzis SM, Evans JJ, Hernandez M, Kalicanin T, Lacchetti C, Nakhleh RE, Otis CN, Pantanowitz L, Parkash V, Raab SS. Interpretive Diagnostic Error Reduction: Guideline Update from the College of American Pathologists in Collaboration With the Association of Directors of Anatomic and Subspecialty Pathology. Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine. Published online 2026.
doi: 10.5858/arpa.2026-0016-CP.

_____

CAP Error Reduction: What Pathologists, Labs, and Genomics Stakeholders Need to Know

TLDR

CAP has released an important 2026 update on Interpretive Diagnostic Error Reduction in anatomic pathology. The headline is simple: pathology groups should have structured, documented, timely case-review processes to detect disagreements, reduce interpretive errors, and improve patient care. But the article is more interesting than a generic “peer review is good” statement. CAP is effectively saying that diagnostic accuracy in pathology is no longer just an individual professional virtue; it is a system property that must be designed, monitored, and improved.

The guideline update is grounded in a systematic review of the literature since the 2016 CAP guideline. It focuses mainly on surgical pathology and cytology, especially secondary review, targeted review, reviewer expertise, agreement, disagreement, and the emerging role of digital pathology and AI. CAP lands on two strong recommendations: first, pathologists should develop procedures to review cases for disagreements and potential interpretive errors; second, these reviews should be performed timely enough to affect patient care. CAP also recommends documented procedures, periodic monitoring, corrective steps when poor agreement is found, and use of clinically relevant grading systems, especially simpler systems with meaningful clinical cut points.

Strategically, this is a major move for CAP. It positions pathology not merely as a craft practiced by experts at microscopes, but as a modern diagnostic discipline with quality systems, measurable variation, AI-adjacent workflows, and accountability for patient-facing diagnostic outcomes. The implications extend beyond anatomic pathology. Genomics, molecular pathology, tumor profiling, and AI-enabled diagnostics all face analogous problems: complex interpretation, variable reporting, uncertain agreement, high clinical stakes, and the need for structured review before results become treatment decisions.

__________________________________________

LACMA Leadership Vague on Reopening of "Japanese Pavilion"

 LACMA management has been evasive on the issue of when the Japanese Pavilion will reopen.



REPORTER: Director Williams, museum visitors have one question above all others. When will the Japanese Pavilion reopen?

DIRECTOR: We're extremely excited about the Pavilion. It represents a vital component of our long-term vision for visitor engagement and cross-cultural dialogue.

REPORTER: Yes, but when will it reopen?

DIRECTOR: The public response to our new galleries has been extraordinary.

REPORTER: The Pavilion.

DIRECTOR: Exactly.

REPORTER: No, not exactly. The Japanese Pavilion. When does it open?

DIRECTOR: We continue to make excellent progress.

REPORTER: Toward what date?

DIRECTOR: Toward a future in which visitors will enjoy an enhanced experience.

REPORTER: Is that future next month?

DIRECTOR: We don't think in terms of months.

REPORTER: What terms do you think in?

DIRECTOR: Experiences.

REPORTER: Is the experience scheduled?

DIRECTOR: We are actively evaluating scheduling opportunities.

REPORTER: So there is no date.

DIRECTOR: There are many dates.

REPORTER: Name one.

DIRECTOR: Today, for example.

REPORTER: A reopening date.

DIRECTOR: We prefer not to limit ourselves with labels.

REPORTER: Is the building finished?

DIRECTOR: The Pavilion occupies a unique place within our campus ecosystem.

REPORTER: Is that a yes?

DIRECTOR: The building exists.

REPORTER: Was it finished last year?

DIRECTOR: Completion is a multifaceted concept.

REPORTER: Are visitors allowed inside?

DIRECTOR: Not currently.

REPORTER: Why not?

DIRECTOR: We are preparing for a world-class visitor experience.

REPORTER: By keeping visitors out?

DIRECTOR: Quality requires patience.

REPORTER: How much patience?

DIRECTOR: The Japanese have long valued patience.

REPORTER: The museum has been valuing it for several years.

DIRECTOR: We see that as evidence of our commitment.

REPORTER: Can you give me any estimate? Summer? Fall? This decade?

DIRECTOR: We are very pleased with the trajectory.

REPORTER: Toward what?

DIRECTOR: Reopening.

REPORTER: When?

DIRECTOR: At the appropriate moment.

REPORTER: Which is?

DIRECTOR: Appropriate.

REPORTER: Let me try another way. Suppose I return one year from today. Will the Pavilion be open?

DIRECTOR: We look forward to welcoming all visitors to LACMA.

REPORTER: That's not an answer.

DIRECTOR: It's an invitation.

REPORTER: Suppose I return ten years from today.

DIRECTOR: We remain committed to excellence.

REPORTER: Twenty years?

DIRECTOR: Our commitment is long-term.

REPORTER: Are you personally aware of a reopening date?

DIRECTOR: I am aware of many things.

REPORTER: Is a reopening date among them?

DIRECTOR: Museums are ultimately about discovery.

REPORTER: I feel as though I'm discovering very little.

DIRECTOR: Then perhaps you are experiencing the Pavilion exactly as intended.

REPORTER: Meaning?

DIRECTOR: It remains, at present, a meditation on absence.

REPORTER: So the exhibit is already open?

DIRECTOR: Conceptually, yes.

REPORTER: Thank you.

DIRECTOR: We appreciate your interest in the Pavilion.