Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
FACT
The more intently I try to hear something on tv, the more likely tiny children will ignore their 2 playrooms and insist on playing within 3 feet of me as loudly as possible.
Monday, December 29, 2014
Goodbye Rex. Finally.
... I've been screaming for years and leads me to this: there is no shame in being a great Senator who has neither the desire nor the facility to be president any more than there is in being a great offensive or defensive coordinator without the desire or facility of being a head coach. I've used the Norv Turner example for years; only now does it occur me to apply it to Teddy. - XMASTIMEAfter all these years of buffoonery, the Jets finally fired Rex Ryan. Rex is the latest example of the above but even more so; just like his asshole dad he was made to be a defensive coordinator and not a head coach. He doesn't really care about offense and lives off that "hey, offense is for pussies, let's be against them too every week!" mentality. After a few years on the NFL Today or whatever hopefully he won't be Peter-principled into becoming a head coach again. And there's no shame in that, for fuck's sake.
Hmmm...
Via one of those Facebook "Which US President are You?" quizzes:
"But Xmastime", you say in the voice of Craig “Ironhead” Heyward from those soap commercials (RIP), “wasn't one of your first posts almost 10 years ago about this?"
Sigh. Yes it was, faithful readers. YES, it was.
"But Xmastime", you say in the voice of Craig “Ironhead” Heyward from those soap commercials (RIP), “wasn't one of your first posts almost 10 years ago about this?"
Sigh. Yes it was, faithful reader
A Tale of Two Pizzas
Although not as well-known for delivery as Domino's, there was a Little Caesars across from my freshman dorm that was happy to deliver to us. This was my entry into the world of pizza delivery; coming from a tiny town, pizza for me meant an hour-long wait for my mother's car headlights after going in town to get one from Roma's. I was flabbergasted that you could pick up the phone and then a pizza would appear; if you looked ta my freshman year check book, although I wouldn't recommend it but hey you gotta be you, just about every entry you'd see would read LITTLE CAESARS.
Interesting article earlier this year, via Eater, on Little Caesars and Dominos, including this:
And here's a little Xmastme holla for the ladies out there readng this.
Interesting article earlier this year, via Eater, on Little Caesars and Dominos, including this:
It’s a fluke that the chains emerged from the same corner of Michigan at roughly the same time more than 50 years ago. Yet, in different ways, Domino’s and Little Caesars changed the way Americans eat pizza, helping to make it one of the country’s most popular foods. The pizza barons were great at selling pies. Now one wants to save Detroit, and the other wants to save everything else.As for the 15 longform stories, do yourself a favor and read the one about the never-ending TGIF mozzarella sticks, which I remember from when it first appeared a few months ago. Feel the grease in your guts as he marches on.
And here's a little Xmastme holla for the ladies out there readng this.
The Interview
Not really a-propos of anything other than I'm too lazy right now to think of anything new & original, but the kerfuffle over the panic-inducing movie The Interview has reminded me of a time when we weren't so gotdam squeamish.
Ah, The Troops
Many, many times on Xmastime I've wondered about our paradox when it comes to the troops; our insistence that there is no more holy a duty than to proclaim our "support" of the troops while at the same time insisting they're locked in a series of never-ending wars (to the point that we've fooled ourselves into believing that questioning if they should one day come home "hurts their feelings" and therein morale), ripped away from their families for an unprecedented number of tours (including Reservists), re-electing Congressmen who gleefully cut their benefits every chance they get or use the troops' sexuality as a political weapon, and then not really wanting to be bothered to hear about it whenever someone points out the disturbingly steep incline of suicides. We go on and on, every jerkoff with a camera or Facebook account desperately trying to out-do each other in an effort to BREAK THE RECORD!!! for showing how much they love the troops, numbed to any thoughts of even asking is it really worth it? - XMASTIMEInteresting Fallows article HERE re: our whole brainlessly-worship-the-troops-without-really-giving-a-shit:
This reverent but disengaged attitude toward the military—we love the troops, but we’d rather not think about them—has become so familiar that we assume it is the American norm. But it is not. When Dwight D. Eisenhower, as a five-star general and the supreme commander, led what may have in fact been the finest fighting force in the history of the world, he did not describe it in that puffed-up way. On the eve of the D-Day invasion, he warned his troops, “Your task will not be an easy one,” because “your enemy is well-trained, well-equipped, and battle-hardened.” As president, Eisenhower’s most famous statement about the military was his warning in his farewell address of what could happen if its political influence grew unchecked.
Further interesting note:
From Mister Roberts to South Pacific to Catch-22, from The Caine Mutiny to The Naked and the Dead to From Here to Eternity, American popular and high culture treated our last mass-mobilization war as an effort deserving deep respect and pride, but not above criticism and lampooning. The collective achievement of the military was heroic, but its members and leaders were still real people, with all the foibles of real life. A decade after that war ended, the most popular military-themed TV program was The Phil Silvers Show, about a con man in uniform named Sgt. Bilko. As Bilko, Phil Silvers was that stock American sitcom figure, the lovable blowhard—a role familiar from the time of Jackie Gleason in The Honeymooners to Homer Simpson in The Simpsons today. Gomer Pyle, USMC; Hogan’s Heroes; McHale’s Navy; and even the anachronistic frontier show F Troop were sitcoms whose settings were U.S. military units and whose villains—and schemers, and stooges, and occasional idealists—were people in uniform. American culture was sufficiently at ease with the military to make fun of it, a stance now hard to imagine outside the military itself.
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
Happy Xmas Eve!
Memory Lane, from 2012:
Paddy Mac, 2026 Heisman Trophy Winner!
I'm just kidding, he's a terrible football player. Weighs 46 pounds and,
if we're being honest, hasn't really shown the drive to be the single
best college football player in the nation, so.
Dinner is served.
"Hi! Where might I go should I wish to shit my pants?"
"Which one of you motherfuckers took my Newports??!!"
Sistatime!'s first mimosa of the day. Hey, it's 10:30am somewhere, right?
"So there's no Santa Claus, AND I hafta wear a helmet around the house. Great."
Dessert is served.
"Are you Santa Claus? No? Then get the hell outta here. Don't be fucking up this year's haul, asshole."
Fact, III
If a kid shouts to you "no no, watch ME!" then the odds of them immediately hurting themselves are 100%
Fact, II
The 2 most-feared words in the English language when watching kids put on a curiously improvisational play: "And then..."
FACT
If you trail behind me poking me in the back while screaming at the top of your lungs you are LITERALLY the worst Hide & Seek hider ever.
Tuesday, December 23, 2014
RIP Mrs. Baylock
A few years ago I was shocked to realize that the scariest woman in film history, The Omen's Mrs. Baylock, was smoking hot in her time.
Anyway, now she's dead.
"I'll wait for you in Hell, Xmastime."
Anyway, now she's dead.
"I'll wait for you in Hell, Xmastime."
State du Moi
3 year-old: "I need you to put this clip in my hair."
Me: "I don't know how to do that..."
3 year-old: "It's a clip. You clip it."
Me: "...ah. Of course."
Me: "I don't know how to do that..."
3 year-old: "It's a clip. You clip it."
Me: "...ah. Of course."
Monday, December 22, 2014
Wtf? du Jour
Yeah Yeah, Yeah Yeah
Joe Strummer died 12 years ago today. It's still the most shocking celebrity death for me. At least we knew Joey Ramone was sick, Joe just sat down on his couch and died. Billy Bragg:
"It's not just going to be people of my generation thinking of Joe," says Bragg, "but anybody who's ever picked up a guitar with the urge to change the world. We never go away. But something has gone now. A shining light has been snuffed out."
Lennon & McCartney and Some Idiots
550 artists answer the immortal question: Lennon or McCartney?
Here is the final tally of responses:
Lennon: 282
McCartney: 196
No answer: 50
Ringo Starr: 4
George Harrison: 15
Jimi Hendrix: 1
Lou Reed: 1
Keith Richards: 1
Oasis: 1
Some important observations: Adam Levine of Maroon 5 blew off the question; Australians (including Baz Luhrmann, Ben Lee, and the lead singer of Wolfmother) are very indecisive; Bo Diddley doesn't get The Beatles ("I don't understand what they're doing. Never have"); several yuksters made jokes about Vladimir Lenin; actress Caitlin Gerard voted for "Lemon;" Jack McBrayer is in awe of McCartney; Johnny Rotten chose Lennon, but "I've met McCartney and liked him, so that's a puzzlement;" Will.i.am is the worst ("McCartney with Lennon glasses"); and a special shoutout to Hungarian American director Nimrod Antal who went with "Oasis," which is objectively the correct answer.
I'm Guessing...
...the people who agree with Giuliani on this are the same people
outraged at the idea of “politicizing” school shooting sprees by
mentioning gun control.
West Wing Thought du Jour
Yet another bit of genius re: The West Wing
is how much President Bartlet reflects both of his youngest senior
staffers, Sam Seaborn and Josh Lyman. Sometimes I'll think "boy, he's
exactly like Sam": super-smart nerd, filled with trivial facts
(particular fondness for science/nature factoids) and supremely
idealistic. Other times I'll think "boy, he's exactly like Josh": always
the smartest political operative in the room, and funny (often to the great
derision of others.) Very clever and telling that the President can be
seen in the young bucks so clearly, and not just the old-guard of his
own generation.
Originally sexily posted in 2008.
Originally sexily posted in 2008.
Sunday, December 21, 2014
"I'll Make It"
Unlike its Hoosiers version Hickory Huskers, the 1954 Milan team it was based on did not barely scrape by teams it had no business being in the gym with; it steamrolled through a playoff run that included double-digit win over a Crispus Attucks tam that featured a certain sophomore named Oscar Robertson.
In the very fist book I ever read on the subject, over 25 years ago as a high school junior, I remember reading that Milan coach Marvin Wood spent most of halftimes giving his players oranges and reading them poetry to calm them down for the 2nd half. This article on Lions coach Jim Caldwell reminded me of that:
In the very fist book I ever read on the subject, over 25 years ago as a high school junior, I remember reading that Milan coach Marvin Wood spent most of halftimes giving his players oranges and reading them poetry to calm them down for the 2nd half. This article on Lions coach Jim Caldwell reminded me of that:
Sounds like an interesting dude, a la Woody Hayes' endless reciting of Emerson.He recites poetry and proverbs, draws from Nelson Mandela and Joe Torre, discusses humanism as naturally as he would a hitch route. He does not scream. He does not get angry. He does not curse, nor, longtime friends say, has he ever. If he cannot communicate his point without swearing, Caldwell reasons, then that is his fault.
Saturday, December 20, 2014
I don't know what's funnier about this...
...that Glenn Beck thinks 40 years from now film/video will look like it did in 1982, or everything else. #unintentionalcomedygold
Friday, December 19, 2014
The Williamsburg Bridge
Like anybody I guess, I assumed New York City began the second I walked in, and would disappear the moment I left. Just now I walked by my freight elevator, where a kid in his early 20's wearing a Yeah Yeah Yeahs t-shirt was excitedly loading in boxes from what looked like his parents' minivan. - XMASTIMEI walked across and back the Williamsburg Bridge many times; it was a perfect hour walk door to door round-trip from 100 Metro. And it turns 111 today:
Even the MOVIES love you—you've been featured in City for Conquest (1940), A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945), The Naked City (1948), The French Connection (1971), Serpico and Live and Let Die (both 1973), Once Upon a Time in America (1984), Johnny Suede (1991), Scent of a Woman (1992), American Gangster (2007), The Siege (1998), Léon (1994), The Naked Brothers Band: The Movie (2005), and The Dark Knight Rises and The Amazing Spider-Man (both 2012).
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Thoughts. I Have Them.
Must say, I've given The Newsroom a lot of crap over the years but I do admire the chutzpah of Sorkin titling the finale What Kind of Day Has It Been. #westwingrulez
State du Moi
So far this week I seem to have a problem almost walking into people on the sidewalk. I go right they go right, I go left they go left. Wtf?
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
“You said it, lil’ buddy,” I agreed. “No drinking
tonight. In bed by ten o’clock. Big day tomorrow.”
“Rats!”
“Yeah. You’re right
lil’ buddy.” We crossed over Grand
Avenue and onto the sidewalk. “I guess
they’re all big from now on.”
I looked back up and found myself directly in front of a
young girl within a throng of kids that had just been let out of school for the
day. I beared my right as she did her left,
and then we both did the opposite back and forth for a few seconds, dancing
wordlessly in front of each other, until she finally yelled to break the
silence:
“Learn to swerve, motherfucker!”
Monday, December 15, 2014
The Last Hours of George Washington
Which, apparently, included a lot of bleeding:
Back in 1799, Washington’s physicians justified the removal of more than 80 ounces of his blood (2.365 liters or 40 percent of his total blood volume) over a 12-hour period in order to reduce the massive inflammation of his windpipe and constrict the blood vessels in the region."I'm on the $1 bill, motherfuckers! Quit cutting me!!!!"
Anarchy in the UK
I've worn this record out over & over since I was 14, and I still get blown away every time I hear it. Here's a ittle background #stevejonesisaBEAST
Interesting du Jour
It seems to me that the people who are pro-torture are also the ones who most vociferously fetishize the troops. Surely this is some sort of cruel paradox; can you think of a single worse thing that can happen to troops serving in hostile territory than last week’s torture report?
Of course they’d also set a precedent in that the same people are the ones who are always clamoring to put the troops in harm’s way in the first place, so. Curious.
Of course they’d also set a precedent in that the same people are the ones who are always clamoring to put the troops in harm’s way in the first place, so. Curious.
Saturday, December 13, 2014
Friday, December 12, 2014
State du Moi
After 42 years, I think I just accidentally learned how to fold a t-shirt.
Life. It's really happening, isn't it?
Life. It's really happening, isn't it?
Sandinista!, Baby
Today's the 34th anniversary of the release of The Clash's sprawling (to put it mildly) three-record Sandinista! Listening to it now, part of its charm
might be that you can't really pin it down to a single album. I remember
reading a quote from Mick Jones once that the album was meant to be
skipped around, and that if it had been released in the cd age its
legacy would be different.
I'm so old that while in college I actually called Rolling Stone magazine and told them I wanted to write a college paper on the Clash. They were so baffled that they actually SENT mimeographed copies of every article on the Clash that had been in RS, along with a personal note "Greg - hope this helps, let me know how it goes." I still have the stuff they sent me; doing something like that in today's internet age is pretty unthinkable.
Okay, here's my single-album version early:
I also feel this could be changed into a Christmas song.
I'm so old that while in college I actually called Rolling Stone magazine and told them I wanted to write a college paper on the Clash. They were so baffled that they actually SENT mimeographed copies of every article on the Clash that had been in RS, along with a personal note "Greg - hope this helps, let me know how it goes." I still have the stuff they sent me; doing something like that in today's internet age is pretty unthinkable.
Okay, here's my single-album version early:
Hitsville UK
The Leader
Someone Got Murdered
Lose this Skin
Police on My Back
The Sound of the Sinners
Career Opportunities
Bankrobber (my artistic license, so suck it)
The Street Parade
I also feel this could be changed into a Christmas song.
Thursday, December 11, 2014
Office Tote Bags
Shouldn’t the “Die Trying” be the line that’s crossed out? I mean, I’d like to be rich, not dead. Just saying.
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
NYC December
Nothing makes me miss New York City like December. Buzzfeed has a list of 21 Reasons Christmas in NYC Ruins You Forever.
Made me think of this post from back in December 2007. I'll post here so you don't have to hit a link which you weren't gonna fucking do anyway, right?
Made me think of this post from back in December 2007. I'll post here so you don't have to hit a link which you weren't gonna fucking do anyway, right?
The only thing I like as much as complete and utter darkness outside is when it snows. And today, finally, brings the first snowfall of the year, which led me to start thinking about certain albums that snow reminds me of. Sometimes it's the sound, sometimes some stupid memory attached to it. Such as
The Replacements "Tim": any Replacements album has a fall/winterness to it. Tim sounds like winter cause of the reverb, plus I can still hear it as David English's huge gray truck pulls us out of a ditch on a snow day.
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The Replacements "Don't Tell a Soul": in love for the first time, listening to this going sledding with a broken heart.
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Husker Du "Flip Your Wig": everything they did sounded like a blizzard, right?
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Pavement "Slanted and Enchanted": doesn't sound wintry, but it was snowing when I first heard it in a station wagon (and I REALLY wanted to hate it.)
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The Phil Spector box set: camon. All those songs reek of winter; somehting about that wall of sound. And that's BEFORE you put the Christmas record on. Prolly THE winter/snow set.
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The Ramones "Halfway to Sanity": was another snow day when I bought this (12/22/87) at Doc's in town. Loaded up in my friend Brian's Capri, went to Richmond to walk around the mall all day.
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U2 "War" and "The Unforgettable Fire": just sound wintry. I guess that video for "New Years Day" helps.
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The Beatles "A Hard Day's Night": cozy wintry sound, and makes me think of all the snowy nights I played this on the juke at the Halloween Bar.
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DT & the Shakes "Don't Let Me Down" single: has that enclosed, compressed sound to it that reeks of cold, winter night. and I grew up worshiping them and the Rational Herdsmen and the Undecided, all at JMU in the mid-80s, and I'd always picture them playin at a bar while it snows outside. Awwwwwwww.
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And of course if you see snow and don't immediately think of "Fairytale of New York", then you ain't human.
Serge!
Longtime Xmastime buddy Serge Bielanko was
on The Today Show this morning...on a side note, if I'm being honest, I cannot say I would
put off Crazy Lee Giffords advances should they come my way...
Torture Report, Cont.
As for rectal feeding, surely someone's already used the "I thought it was don't shit where you eat, not don't eat where you shit" joke already?
CD
After being decommissioned since the 90s, Charles Dickens' personal postbox has been re-opened for service:
A postbox of Christmas past, specially installed for Charles Dickens, has been put back in service 150 years after the author first used it.How batshit would this dude have gone over email, Facebook and Twitter?
It was one of the earliest wall boxes to be introduced. Dickens, a prolific letter writer, had lobbied for it to be installed outside his home in Gad’s Hill Place, Kent, to spare him the mile-long trek to his nearest village of Higham.
The author’s great-great-granddaughter Marion, who officially opened the box at a Victorian-themed ceremony, said Dickens wrote more than 14,000 letters, with more of 2,000 of them posted from that box between 1859 and 1870. The amount of mail was so huge he warranted his own Post Office private mail bag.
In America
The only kind of governmental over-reach Republicans seem to not mind is torture.
“My tax dollars going towards brutally torturing someone whether it’s effective or not” = GOOD
“My tax dollars going towards ensuring someone can get marginally affordable healthcare” = BAD
Got it.
“My tax dollars going towards brutally torturing someone whether it’s effective or not” = GOOD
“My tax dollars going towards ensuring someone can get marginally affordable healthcare” = BAD
Got it.
Tuesday, December 09, 2014
On Torture
Moral stances aside, the sad fact is that in the end it simply does not work. Moi, back in 2008:
The thing about torture to me is that UNFORTUNATELY, I live in the real world - a world that does shit I don't really wanna know about, as long as the end result actually works without me finding out the details. In other words no, I DON'T want to know how the sausage is made; but I DO want the sausage to taste good.
For years now I've been yammering that as immoral and wrong as torture is, if it actually WORKED I could be swayed to "look the other way" - if wars could be over with in minutes, if real information was given, if torture made the price of McNuggets come down I might be okay with being willfully ignorant. Hey, a lot of shit goes on that we're better off not knowing about...but enough about Star Jones' shower.
But where torture loses me is that it just does not work. For fuck's sake, I said this a year ago:
...if you’re going to do shit that’s immoral and illegal and repulsive to anyone who’s even part human, at least make sure the shit works! Water-board my ass and within seconds I’ll tell you I shot Kennedy, fuck little boys and have never watched all of Caddyshack. Torture does not work; is it worth being morally bankrupt?Torture is like shooting a deer, skinning it, and then leaving the meat in the forest. Wtf? If you're gonna shoot Bambi, you better fucking make some venison stew that can feed a whole neighborhood.
Also on torture last year I wrote about the absurdity of our "thirst for information!" when I wrote about Saddam's hanging:
How come we love torturing whatever low-on-the-totem-pole terrorist there may be, these are the people we use to justify water-boarding...but we couldn't fucking wait til Saddam Hussein was executed? If torture is so effective, if torture is the key, then why the fuck wouldn't we have tortured him?Still a mystery to me.
Didn't we go to war under the presumption that Saddam had WMD? And...did we not capture Saddam? So, if we thought Saddam had the capability of destroying the USA...I mean, if anyone had info on the whole war it'd be him, right?...and if we were into torturing people...why were we so excited about the execution of Saddam; if he really was the master behind WMD, wouldn't we have wanted to keep him around for awhile?
Hasn't the execution of Saddam belied our whole philosophy on torture?
But now we find out that torture DOES work...IN FUCKING OURSELVES OVER!!!!
I learned in Iraq that the No. 1 reason foreign fighters flocked there to fight were the abuses carried out at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo. Our policy of torture was directly and swiftly recruiting fighters for al-Qaeda in Iraq.That's nice, right? While not being effective in any way, we morally bankrupt ourselves AND make the very problem we were looking to solve a thousand times worse. Hmm. Seriously, is there ANY other way we could fuck ourselves over with torture while we're at it? I mean, can we give away the cure for cancer in this equation somehow? Maybe find out a way to eliminate the NFL while we're at it?
For fuck's sake. Torture: like a Sarah Lawrence graduate, it just don't work.
Proud to Be an 'Merican
Even
glancing at the released torture report is depressing, with its
reprehensible brutality matched only by its head-shaking
ineffectiveness. Awesome.
That's What She Said
Was Linda the first person to use the phrase? From a 1984 Playboy article with Paul McCartney that for some reason she was involved with:
PLAYBOY: Has the McCartneys' relationship with Yoko changed since John'sWell. She was no Michael Scott, that's for sure.
death?
LINDA: No comment! Only kidding. That's what she said.
Damn You, Prince William!
Prince William and Princess Kate-Xmastime are in Brooklyn. Which they never did while I lived there. Grrr.
Ah yes, George: The Lookaway. Nice. I invented that one back in 1993, you're welcome very much.
"But Xmastime", you say in the voice of Craig “Ironhead” Heyward from those soap commercials (RIP), “wasn't your live-bloging of their wedding the single greatest moment of the Internet?"
Sigh. Yes, faithful readers. Yes it was.
Ah yes, George: The Lookaway. Nice. I invented that one back in 1993, you're welcome very much.
"But Xmastime", you say in the voice of Craig “Ironhead” Heyward from those soap commercials (RIP), “wasn't your live-bloging of their wedding the single greatest moment of the Internet?"
Sigh. Yes, faithful reader
I Am Un Chien Andalusia
It's been 25 years since the release of The Pixies awesome Doolittle, and this guy might know why it's so great.
Doolittle is a great album. For one, at that point it was the only album I had ever bought sight unseen, never even having heard of the band. More importantly, it's the album I bought when this happened.
Nom nom nom!!!
Doolittle is a great album. For one, at that point it was the only album I had ever bought sight unseen, never even having heard of the band. More importantly, it's the album I bought when this happened.
Nom nom nom!!!
Monday, December 08, 2014
Sorry, John Updike
Moi a couple of months ago after not even bothering to finish Rabbit, Run:
Also, the lottery bit makes me laugh, thinking of someone's breakdown of why George Harrison was always so grouchy:
My official word on John Updike: he's a great writer, but not a good storyteller.It bugged me throughout even if Rabbit did seem real or not, I simply didn't believe Updike. And then a few days ago, via Sully I may have the answer:
Harold Bloom once snarkily quipped that John Updike was “a minor novelist with a major style.” After reading Adam Begley’s biography, Updike, Daniel Ross Goodman seems to agree, noting the writer’s “lack of intense passion.” He speculates the deficit “was because Updike did not experience the deep suffering of many other literary geniuses”...Updike’s literary setbacks were those of a lottery winner who stubs his toe on the way to the bank and then has to wait in line before he can cash his check.Maybe it's not fair to judge another's trials, and I'm probably the only person I know that doesn't like Updike, but I certainly sensed the above as I was reading him.
Also, the lottery bit makes me laugh, thinking of someone's breakdown of why George Harrison was always so grouchy:
Finally, the film really never investigates the real mystery of Harrison: What was he so morose about?...Harrison has always had a sense of the aggrieved about him. I just don't know what the source of it was. In Harrison's mini-autobiography at the front of I Me Mine, the unasked-for collection of his song lyrics, he seems mostly unhappy about … the travel indignities he suffered during the Beatles years.
Footnotes
I'm often fascinated by uber-footnotes in history; either in pictures (ie. who's the woman in the picture they always show kneeling over the body at Kent State?) or otherwise (ie Raymond Jones - to quote Wikipedia: The Beatles had recorded the 'My Bonnie' single with Tony Sheridan in Germany...Epstein's version of the story was that a customer—Raymond Jones—walked into the NEMS shop and asked Epstein for the "My Bonnie" single, which made Epstein curious about the group.") Who are these people? Has anyone ever interviewed them? That should be a whole book, interviews with these footnote people. There's millions of 'em.I never seem to have watched it all the way through at any one time, but the one scene below from the 1988 documentary Imagine I never seem to miss is when some hippie wanders up to John Lennon's house, and instead of releasing the hounds Lennon not only talks to him but invites him in to eat!
Who the fuck is this guy? Is he alive? He's probably about 60 now. Has anyone ever found out who this guy is? Wouldn't it be great to ask "what was it like to find yourself sitting at a kitchen table eating toast with one of the goddam Beatles?"?
See other Xmastime footnotes HERE
12/8
There is a strange juxtaposition to celebrating the birth of
Brothatime!! on the same day we mourn the loss of John Lennon. I mean,
here we have a guy that has been there for every one of my 42 years, a
constant friend by my side through all times good and bad and who will
be there for me all the rest of my days, and then there's also
Brothatime!! HIYOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!
34 Years Ago Tonight
John Lennon signing an autograph for Mark David Chapman hours before Chapman returned to shoot him outside Lennon's Dakota home.
Is This The Laziest MF in America?
“You’re the laziest white man I ever seen.” - Archie Bunker, to Meathead.NASA's New Horizons has woken up so that next year it can give us our closest and best shots ever of the celestial body formerly known as "The Planet Pluto." Very exciting, right? Until we see this:
It's been 3,248 days since its launch, and New Horizons has been asleep for 1,873 of those days, meaning it has worked a total of 1,375 days. It's been sleeping more than working.NASA's New Horizons spacecraft was launched on January 19, 2006. It's down to the final 162 million miles of its journey and will arrive July 14, 2015. New Horizons has had 18 hibernation periods totaling 1,873 days to save wear and tear on its components. This was its last nap.
Sigh. "Where's My Country?" indeed. Sigh (again.)
Saturday, December 06, 2014
Friday, December 05, 2014
Question
Jobs are back, gas prices are cheapest they've been in years, and cops are killing more black people than ever. So why do Republicans still hate Obama so much?
Thursday, December 04, 2014
Oh, Please
I don't have a tv so I'm not watching, but no matter how bad Peter Pan may or not be you lose all cred if you come out and say "I'm gonna be snarky!" before it's even on. Camon.
NYC Cops
Even WITH it being videotaped, you can see weird things might pop up in a trial that might set the cop free somehow. But none of those weird things could possibly be as weird as it not even being allowed to go to trial. Beyond crazy. Incredibly, you find yourself in a situation wherein you can almost wonder if the cop wasn't even the worst part of the incident. Unreal.
Tuesday, December 02, 2014
Economics
I miraculously got a D in Econ ("Econ"...listen to me!) in college, turns out I shoulda been watching Seinfeld.
Speaking of college and since tonight they're airing the Peanuts Christmas Show, you know, since it's December 2, cough, here's come Joe Cool!
Speaking of college and since tonight they're airing the Peanuts Christmas Show, you know, since it's December 2, cough, here's come Joe Cool!
The First Rock Star
On this day in 1867 Charles Dickens began his first American tour:
Sigh. Yes, faithful reader. Yes, I did.
"'She loves you yeah, yeah yeah'...genius, indeed."
This first-night audience included all the great and triple-named of the New England literary elite -- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, Charles Eliot Norton -- though not all were impressed. Emerson complained that the performance was too polished for his taste, as Twain would say later that the New Year's Eve reading he attended was but "glittering frostwork." But this was the minority view, and from two used to getting the lecture-hall praise and dollars that now went to Dickens -- some $140,000 profit for this tour, and an estimated two million dollars in today's money for Dickens's last two years of readings at home and abroad."But Xmastime", you say in the voice of Craig “Ironhead” Heyward from those soap commercials (RIP), “didn't you call Dickens the 6th Beatle years ago?"
Sigh. Yes, faithful reader. Yes, I did.
"'She loves you yeah, yeah yeah'...genius, indeed."
These Girls REALLY Saw The Beatles
The two girls in this photo from the beginning of filming for A Hard Day's Night:
As the pair of us stood on the sidelines, having spotted the Beatles in their stationary train car, Marian and I just looked at each other and said, “Let’s go.” We headed across the railway track, not thinking for one moment about safety. We were 13 and 14, and didn’t think about danger then. We just thought, “Wow, there they are. Oh my God!”
I remember them looking at us through the window. I thought Paul was the best looking. You can see my hand going up to where Paul’s is, and I just started knocking on the window. I can’t tell you the amount of times that I’ve told everyone since, “There was only a piece of glass between Paul McCartney and me!”
I never saw the Beatles again, so this is my claim to fame. I’ve been telling my children about it for years.
Monday, December 01, 2014
Down to The River
It's been 34 years since Bruce unleashed the double album classic The River; a frustrating album once you find out via Tracks that a lot of the outtakes were better than what made the record.
"But Xmastime", you say in the voice of Craig “Ironhead” Heyward from those soap commercials (RIP), “do you have a definitive list of what should have been on The River as a single album?"?"
Sigh. YES, faithful reader, yes:
"But Xmastime", you say in the voice of Craig “Ironhead” Heyward from those soap commercials (RIP), “do you have a definitive list of what should have been on The River as a single album?"?"
Sigh. YES, faithful reader, yes:
The Ties That BindAlso, I'll never understand how The Ties That Bind isn't a bigger deal in the Bruce canon. Superslice of superslices. And one of the greatest middle 8s of all time.
Two Hearts
Independence Day
I Wanna Marry You
The River
I'm a Rocker
Fade Away
The Price You Pay
Wreck on the Highway
Roulette
Dollhouse
Where the Bands Are
Living on the Edge of the World
Take 'em as They Come
I Wanna Be With You
2014 Resolutions Check-In
I have exactly one month to get my resolutions I made a year ago checked off:
2014 Resolutions:
1. Be more reckless with my health.
2. Watch more tv.
3. Don’t take no sh-t from nobody.
4. Loosen the hell up re: recycling.
5. Track down high school football coach, demand to know where my highlight reel for Div. I college recruiters went.
6. Fantasize more about sex with women who are way, way, way, way out of my league.
7. Leave vague, ominous messages on Facebook like “…gee, I dunno…” or ”…out on the ledge…”
8. Go to more high school parties.
9. Remind people that “nobody in (insert town) knows how to drive in the rain” more often.
10. Casually drop the phrase “deez nuts” during a meeting.
11. Spread my wings, see how high I can soar.
12. Get through the year without accidentally eating a raisin.
13. Finish my autobiography, “The Life & Times of Greg Wilson: Believe Me, It Coulda Been Worse.”
14. Talk more, listen less.
15. Find out once and for all what all these g@%!dam squirrels are up to.
16. Finally finish the last chapter of the last Sweet Valley High book. Seriously people, it’s time.
17. Quit being so goddam fearless; really question what the hell I'm doing at every step of the way until I've talked myself out of it.
2014 Resolutions:
1. Be more reckless with my health.
2. Watch more tv.
3. Don’t take no sh-t from nobody.
4. Loosen the hell up re: recycling.
5. Track down high school football coach, demand to know where my highlight reel for Div. I college recruiters went.
6. Fantasize more about sex with women who are way, way, way, way out of my league.
7. Leave vague, ominous messages on Facebook like “…gee, I dunno…” or ”…out on the ledge…”
8. Go to more high school parties.
9. Remind people that “nobody in (insert town) knows how to drive in the rain” more often.
10. Casually drop the phrase “deez nuts” during a meeting.
11. Spread my wings, see how high I can soar.
12. Get through the year without accidentally eating a raisin.
13. Finish my autobiography, “The Life & Times of Greg Wilson: Believe Me, It Coulda Been Worse.”
14. Talk more, listen less.
15. Find out once and for all what all these g@%!dam squirrels are up to.
16. Finally finish the last chapter of the last Sweet Valley High book. Seriously people, it’s time.
17. Quit being so goddam fearless; really question what the hell I'm doing at every step of the way until I've talked myself out of it.
Footnotes
I'm often fascinated by uber-footnotes in history; either in pictures (eg. who's the woman in the picture they always show kneeling over the body at Kent State?) or otherwise (eg Raymond Jones - to quote Wikipedia: The Beatles had recorded the 'My Bonnie' single with Tony Sheridan in Germany...Epstein's version of the story was that a customer—Raymond Jones—walked into the NEMS shop and asked Epstein for the "My Bonnie" single, which made Epstein curious about the group.") Who are these people? Has anyone ever interviewed them? That should be a whole book, interviews with these footnote people. There's millions of 'em. - SEE XMASTIME FOOTNOTES HERE.Today is the 59h anniversary of Rosa Parks refusing to give up her seat on the bus. Who was the white guy she refused to give up her seat to?
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