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Monday, September 30, 2013

Buddy, Gonna Shut You Down

GOP theme song?  "Shut it off, shut it off, buddy gonna shut you down."  A warning on the current crisis from the Beach Boys with early hit "Shut Down."

Hollywood Exploits the Bomb

Interesting piece today at the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists on how, in contrast to movies of olde, present day "action" flicks merely exploit nuclear danger and don't make it palpable or thought-provoking.  Frankly, I did not know that The Wolverine with Hugh Jackman had a key scene set during the Nagasaki blast--and I am usually up on all that.   I've written two books about The Bomb and film:  Atomic Cover-up on the U.S. suppression of historic film footage from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and Hollywood Bomb, about the censorship of the film movie epic (right up to Truman), from MGM, in 1947.

In the Wolverine clip note:  Nagasaki bomb did NOT go off over its target, the harbor, but up one of its valleys.  This cut the death toll in half--to about 75,000.   Also: There were only a couple hundred Japanese troops in the city at the time...

Rosa's Cantina

Here's full Marty Robbins version of "El Paso" which not only was featured in "Breaking Bad" last night but also provided "Felina" title.  It was a #1 hit for like six weeks when it came out--and at Crawdaddy writer Tom Miller found Rosa's Cantina for us.

Hillary Film Axed

Charles Ferguson announces that the much-debated CNN film on Ms. Clinton has been shelved.  It's quite a tale, and here's the conclusion.  Also, in update, NYT has big piece now.  Ferguson 
After approaching well over a hundred people, only two persons who had ever dealt with Mrs. Clinton would agree to an on-camera interview, and I suspected that even they would back out.
This, of course, was the real consequence, and probably the real intent, of the announcements by the RNC, Philippe Reines, and David Brock. Neither political party wanted the film made. After painful reflection, I decided that I couldn't make a film of which I would be proud. And so I'm cancelling. (Not because of any pressure from CNN -- quite the contrary.) It's a victory for the Clintons, and for the money machines that both political parties have now become. But I don't think that it's a victory for the media, or for the American people. I still believe that Mrs. Clinton has many virtues including great intelligence, fortitude, and a deep commitment to bettering the lives of women and children worldwide. But this is not her finest hour.

A High Note on 'Sopranos'

We finally finished re-watching all of "The Sopranos" episodes last night in order from season one.  (Oddly, we almost went to see the new Gandolfini flick in the afternoon.)  Certainly a revealing and rewarding way to do it and, yes, I'd forgotten so much (e.g. Adriana getting whacked much earlier than I'd thought).  The Cleaver movie pitch and shoot was wild and, of course, Chris and Little Carmine's sit-down with Ben Kingsley in Hollywood, and the swag bags, could hardly be funnier.  In final episode we see A.J. listening to Dylan's "It's Alright Ma" in his SUV--before it explodes in flames.  And so on.

Naturally, after final episode, I searched and found what claims to be--and seems to be--"the definitive" take on the final shot.  So, yes, I'd say the show did have the finality that some are now claiming it lacked--comparing it unfavorably to the close of "Breaking Bad."  Read it here, and the clip below.  No, I've never owned a Members Only jacket so don't look at me.

Journalistic 'Disgrace' in Shutdown Coverage

My new piece at The Nation.

Plus: Dave Weigel debunks GOP claims that Democrats have been just as bad as holding them "hostage" in previous debt ceiling debates. 
Raising the debt limit always been unpopular, and tough to explain to voters. A few times, Democrats balked at raising it for a few days to make a point, then caved in. Many more times, they've just voted for the damn thing. John Boehner's Republicans have only ever agreed to raise the debt limit if they won major policy concessions from the president. Both parties don't do it. One party does it.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Scahill-Greenwald Team Up

Big AP story just now on two of the best diggers, Jeremy Scahill and Glenn Greenwald, joining forces to probe top secret U.S. "assassination" program, which could mean a lot of things and cover a lot, or not.  Here's the AP scoop:
Jeremy Scahill, a contributor to The Nation magazine and the New York Times best-selling author of "Dirty Wars," said he will be working with Glenn Greenwald, the Rio-based journalist who has written stories about U.S. surveillance programs based on documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.
"The connections between war and surveillance are clear. I don't want to give too much away but Glenn and I are working on a project right now that has at its center how the National Security Agency plays a significant, central role in the U.S. assassination program," said Scahill, speaking to moviegoers in Rio de Janeiro, where the documentary based on his book made its Latin American debut at the Rio Film Festival.
"There are so many stories that are yet to be published that we hope will produce 'actionable intelligence,' or information that ordinary citizens across the world can use to try to fight for change, to try to confront those in power," said Scahill.

Man's World? Still?

New commercial aired on SNL with a bit of this, in smooth version, so you might enjoy the sweaty original.  Shorter version.  I can also recommend the live Van Morrison version.

Saturday, September 28, 2013

The Coming Thing

N
YT's Sunday review section not only gives us an assessment of Bob Dylan's chances for a Nobel--but also a full exploration, so to speak, of the current thinking on women and "spontaneous orgasm."  Yes, it was once embraced, so to speak, then debunked--by Masters and Johnson, who get their own show on Showtime tomorrow night--and now gaining fresh respect.  "At Rutgers, Dr. Komisaruk expanded his research to brain scans. In 2003, the first images confirmed the earlier study. Pleasure centers lit up more or less identically whether the women reached sexual highs by hand stimulation or by erotic thoughts."  And then there's Tantra....

Ring Them Nobels

Big NYT op-ed just up by Bill Wyman (no, not the Stones' bassist) on Bob Dylan's strong candidacy for Nobel Prize.  I've pushed Leonard Cohen for this, since unlike Bob he is an honored novelist and poet (beyond song poetry).  Anyway, Wyman lists the strikes against him and the many plusses.

Concludes:
If the academy doesn’t recognize Bob Dylan — a bard who embodied the most significant cultural upheaval of the second half of the last century — it will squander its best chance to honor a pop poet. What other songwriter would remotely qualify? Joni Mitchell or Leonard Cohen? Perhaps. Randy Newman? Chuck D? (In truth, the only other pop artist with work as timeless as Mr. Dylan’s is Chuck Berry — but that’s an argument for another day.) With his superstar peers either silent or content to collect the big bucks playing ingratiating stadium shows, this artist, iconoclastic and still vital, demands that we take the product of his muse on his own terms, and refuses to go so gently.

Fathers' Day

Probably few know that "The Father of Modern Jazz" and "The Father of Country Music" recorded a song together one day in 1930.  Here Louis Armstrong re-creates his session with Jimmie Rodgers--aided by another legend, Mr. Johnny Cash.

How the Media Is Getting Gov't Shutdown and Debt Ceiling 'Debates' Wrong

Probably the smartest thing you'll read today, from James Fallows.  He hits media on this but does provide links to a few folks who have gotten it right.  Read the whole thing as he traces a historic fiasco we haven't seen in decades, maybe over a century, but here's excerpt:
As a matter of journalism, any story that presents the disagreements as a "standoff," a "showdown," a "failure of leadership," a sign of "partisan gridlock," or any of the other usual terms for political disagreement, represents a failure of journalism and an inability to see or describe what is going on....This isn't "gridlock." It is a ferocious struggle within one party, between its traditionalists and its radical factions, with results that unfortunately can harm all the rest of us -- and, should there be a debt default, could harm the rest of the world too...
In case the point is not clear yet: there is no post-Civil War precedent for what the House GOP is doing now. It is radical, and dangerous for the economy and our process of government, and its departure from past political disagreements can't be buffed away or ignored. If someone can think of a precedent after the era of John C. Calhoun, let me know.

Shutdown Looks More Likely

Bulletin just now from NYT:  "House Republican leaders presented their rank and file with a proposal for a one-year delay of President Obama’s health care law and a permanent repeal of its tax on medical devices to attach to the Senate’s bill to keep the government running through Nov. 15. If accepted by the Republican caucus and passed by the House, the package would all but assure that much of the government will shut down on Tuesday. Senate Democratic leaders have made clear that they will accept no such scaling back of the health care law."

Call for Help?

Homeless man and ad for new iPhones, NYC, this week. 


Friday, September 27, 2013

Band Aid Coming

Great to see new box set of The Band's complete legendary 1971 live performances at New York's old Academy of Music (I was there) that came in the old Rock of Ages double-record set, which Robbie Robertson re-mixed--plus he talks of a new Basement Tapes set, hopefully including some of the dozens of still-unreleased songs (I have all the bootlegs).   Here's one of the greatest live performances by anyone, from the Academy of Music gig.

Friday Cat Blogging

There's a long history of this going back to near the beginning of blogging, though not so common today.  So here's my version of ultimate cat blogging--a famous lion on steps on NY Public Library yesterday evening. 

Now a Video Documents Near-Nuclear Disaster in 1961

I've covered the new book on nuclear weapons accidents in the U.S. by Eric Schlosser, and then the release of a document, via The Guardian, proving how close we really came--very--to a detonation in North Carolina in 1961 that could have killed millions on the East Coast.   Now The Guardian, also via Schlosser, posts an "official" video that documents the accident, along with this story.  Of course, the near-miss was kept hidden from Americans for years--and how close we came until this day.  Sclosser tells The Guardian that the significance of the video was that it "conclusively establishes that the Sandia weapons lab itself was concerned about the risk of accidental detonation. Their own experts said that disaster was prevented by a single switch that they knew to be defective." See my book and ebook  Atomic Cover-up.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Denby Hits Harvard on Hollywood-Nazi Book

My new piece at The Nation.  Below:  Chaplin's classic Hitler-kicking-the-globe and finale speech in The Great Dictator. UPDATE  Harvard University Press and author Ben Urwand respond to criticism and stand by book.  Urwand has apparently also written to The New Yorker and awaits publciation.

Do the Rubber Duck

Jimmy Fallons and The Roots did a cool tribute to "Sesame Street" last night but still could not top one of my favorite songs from the 1990s (remember, my son was still an infant)....

Israel's Nukes

My new piece at The Nation: Will Iran's Call for No Nukes Inspire U.S. Media to Finally Probe Israel's Nuclear Program?

New from Leonard

Mr. Cohen debuts new song live.


Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Good Conduct Awards

What happens if you set an orchestra up on streets on NY and put up a sign that reads, "Conduct Us."

A Ted Seller!

With 21 hours to kill in his non-filibuster anti-Obamacare filibuster,  Sen. Ted Cruz resorted to quoting from Dr. Seuss's immortal "Green Eggs and Ham" (which sounds like a Texas recipe to beat a hangover).  This inspired a 1000 Twitter parodies--and, I now note, a surge of sales for the good doctor's book, riding it to #597 on the chart of Amazon bestsellers.  But Cruz seems more like all Cat in Hat, no cattle. And note this:  “The moral message of ‘Green Eggs and Ham’ – to the extent that it has one – is completely at odds with what Cruz was trying to achieve,” says Seuss biographer Phil Nel, a professor at Kansas State University.   You know: try something first before you reject it.

Next:   DVD sales of Sean Penn in Sam I Am?

AIPAC, and Congress, May Kill Iran's Nuclear Compromise

Andrew Sullivan probably nails it.  Truly, the hawks in Israel, and AIPAC, probably prefer the current tensions--any easing and they'd have to give up their dreams of bombing Iran.  And U.S. (and certain NYT reporters) yoked to it, seemingly.
The Greater Israel lobby will do all it can to prevent any conceivable deal that could ensure Iran’s right to peaceful nuclear energy – the sine qua non of any breakthrough. Which means they aim to kill diplomacy to get the war they have been wanting for more than a decade. In this sense, AIPAC is the American equivalent of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards in terms of scuppering any possibility of genuine peace, by refusing to treat Iran as anything but a pariah state. Israel, meanwhile, sits on a couple hundred nuclear missiles aimed in part at Iran. But that inconvenient truth cannot be uttered on Capitol Hill.

D.C. Shooter As Rampage Began

FBI has released startling footage of Aaron Alexis arriving at the Navy Yard, assembling shotgun, and starting to roam the halls looking for victims.  Plus photos here, including etchings on shotgun.

That 'Turning Point' TV Moment

NYT with an interesting piece today on a key moment in TV history--you may find this hard to believe--which simply involved an alleged mix-up of babies on the popular Dick Van Dyke show.  I probably watched it at the time.   It featured a good gag--Dick and wife Mary Tyler Moore think they may have come home from the hospital with the wrong baby, but when the possible other couple shows up at their door, they are....black.  You'll need to read the story to make sense of this probably.  But here's the clip below--the other couple arrive just after the six minute mark.

Iran's Leader on the 'Holocaust'

The day after his UN appearance, he calls the Holocaust clearly a 'crime,' in CNN interview, and also sends greetings to Americans.   But does not back off view on Israel policy vs. Palestinians.
Asked in the CNN interview about his view of the Holocaust, Mr. Rouhani said, “Any crime that happens in history against humanity, including the crime the Nazis created towards the Jews, is reprehensible and condemnable.
“Whatever criminality they committed against the Jews, we condemn,” he said. “The taking of human life is contemptible. It makes no difference whether that life is Jewish life, Christian or Muslim. For us it is the same.”
At the same time, Mr. Rouhani also condemned the Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands, without referring to Israel by name. Repudiating crimes like the Holocaust, he said, “does not mean that on the other hand you can say Nazis committed crimes against a group, now, therefore, they must usurp the land of another group and occupy it.”

Plame Speaking on Female Spies

Our favorite former (outed) CIA analyst, Valerie Plame, reviews for the Wash Post in a slide show plus captions ten portrayals of female CIA types from Claire Danes to Halle Berry to Naomi Watts (as Plame).  So who gets the "reality" prize? Hint:  As I'd guess, Zero Dark Thirty gets the booby prize, so to speak.

'After Tiller'

Name of new must-see documentary on the handful of physicians still doing late-term abortions and death threats.

For Ted Cruz

Van Morrison and Rogers Waters, "Comfortably Numb"--your lips move, but can't hear what you're saying....

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Bono Does Bill

He rolls out a swell Bill Clinton imitation and Bill responds (but not by singing "The Real Thing").  Note:  This is my "fundraising week" here at Pressing Issues--which receives no funding beyond the sales from my books and ebooks.  So please consider purchasing one, from the long list at the right side of this blog, with e-books just $2.99 to $3.99.  Thanks.

Hey, Babe, Take A Wal(K) on the Wild Side

If you're a baseball fan, you may remember the publicity around the recent discovery of a few seconds of new (old) home movie footage of Babe Ruth in his prime at Yankee Stadium, striking out.  Also, a glimpse of Lou Gehrig.  Coverage noted the efforts by archivists, and Keith Olbermann, to  pin down when it was shot.  Now the NYT just reported that the code has been cracked.  See their write-up and video here.  It has link to the blog of guy who cracked the code. The date:  September 9, 1928.  Other Babe footage follows.  See part of my baseball card collection from that era here.

Train in Vain?

The great Amy Davidson with piece at The New Yorker on what she sees as The Coming Hillary for President Train Wreck.  A strong warning from a smartie who says she'd really like a woman president but Hillary's "debts" may come back to haunt her.  And people forget--she lost to a longshot in 2008, why should it be different this year?

Koch Fueled

That "Creepy Uncle Sam" anti-Obamacare commercial funded by Koch Brothers with a different message:

Meet the 'Goldberg'

Ace pianist Jeremy Denk, who I interviewed for my Beethoven book (he has since become a semi-regular New Yorker writer), coming out with his much-awaited take on Bach's Goldberg Variations,  and has already written well and wittily about.  How read more and listen to much of it at NPR site.

The Biggest 'Boner'

I've known about Keith Olbermann's obsession with "Merkle's Boner" for many years.  No, he's not (as far as I know) a porn fan.  It refers to one of the infamous moments in baseball history, and Keith marked its 105th anniversary last night on his new TV show.  He even produced, at the end, the very ball retrieved by Johnny Evers that day so he could touch second base and get an out call on Merkle.  Keith owns the ball.  I also know, from corresponding with Keith a few years back, that his personal email address then (maybe even now) starts with "Merkle."

The play involved the young Giants' first sacker failing to touch second base after a game-winning hit plated a runner at home.  All it did was cost the team the pennant.  Merkle was forever known as "Bonehead" and you'll learn some other amazing facts about his career in Keith's report below.  And following his new piece, see segment he did decade ago, which closes with him interviewing actor playing...Christy Mathewson!

Here's Johnny...and Two More

NYT with tribute to Johnny Cash's "Folsom Prison Blues" today with his famous take, and covers by Brandi Carlile and Keb Mo.  Amazingly, I had featured Brandi's version here a couple months ago after spotting it on Austin City Limits.    Love Dylan in his unreleased basement tape just as well.  Here is Brandi again: 

The 'New Normal'--Surrendering to Gun Violence

Joe Nocera at the NYT, one of the few writers who did "keep up the drumbeat" for gun control for months after Newtown with daily lists of gun deaths (which I've often cited in my frequent posts), is back with a column that hits the way most just shrug over another mass slaughter. 
What has been most stupefying about the reaction to the Navy Yard rampage is how muted it has been. After the horror of Newtown, people were galvanized. This time, the news seemed to be greeted with a resigned shrug. “Is this the new normal?” David Gregory asked Wayne LaPierre of the National Rifle Association on Sunday on “Meet the Press” on NBC. It’s sure starting to feel that way.

Monday, September 23, 2013

Dancing with...Beethoven?

Have never watched "Dancing With the Stars" or any of that stuff, but as a Beethoven guy (see book and film) and Bill Nye watcher (with my son long ago), it's probably my duty to post Bill donning a Ludwig wig and dancing to the disco version The Fifth tonight.

We Almost Lost The East Coast

UPDATE Monday:  Now they've figured out what the fallout effect might have been if the H-bomb had exploded (see left).  And that's just on bomb, folks.


UPDATE:  I mentioned the Schlosser book (below) and covered in a longer piece at The Nation, but now comes a bombshell, so to speak: Schlosser, perhaps to add publicity for book, gave The Guardian the FOIA document he obtained that outlines the single worst (near) nuclear accident here in the U.S.  Their story just now by Ed Pilkington opens:  "A secret document, published in declassified form for the first time by the Guardian today, reveals that the US Air Force came dramatically close to detonating an atom bomb over North Carolina that would have been 260 times more powerful than the device that devastated Hiroshima.
The document, obtained by the investigative journalist Eric Schlosser under the Freedom of Information Act, gives the first conclusive evidence that the US was narrowly spared a disaster of monumental proportions when two Mark 39 hydrogen bombs were accidentally dropped over Goldsboro, North Carolina on 23 January 1961. The bombs fell to earth after a B-52 bomber broke up in mid-air, and one of the devices behaved precisely as a nuclear weapon was designed to behave in warfare: its parachute opened, its trigger mechanisms engaged, and only one low-voltage switch prevented untold carnage.
Fallout might have killed millions along the East Coast right up to NYC.  Of course, the U.S. lied about all this for decades.  The great cover-up after Hiroshima helped lead to this, as chronicled in my Atomic Cover-up book.

Earlier:   Eric Schlosser's much-awaited book on nuclear accidents in U.S. (from losing that H-bomb in 1961that might have detonated--we were lied to about that--to the 1980 silo catastrophe) published today.   See good summary here and first chapter.   And you wonder why I've written so much on nuclear danger--maybe more than anyone--since early 1980s.

Will McAvoy Pens a Note

Twitter is still aflame over favorite homicidal-drug-dealing son Bryan Cranston losing to Jeff Daniels (!) for best actor in the Emmy sweepstakes.  Get over it, folks.  I have my own love/hate relationship with The Newsroom but Jeff is great.  Moving on:  The top Louisville newspaper ran a letter to the editor from a W. McAvoy which was word for word from a recent Newsroom.  They soon pulled it but check out the readers' comments for some fun reactions, such as:   "I found myself laughing hysterically this morning as I was glancing over the forum and 'GOP Requirements' caught my eye. I read the article, and found myself feeling as if I had heard it before. Then, when I saw 'W. McAvoy, 40222' I knew I had heard it the previous Sunday. I must say, shame on the C-J editorial staff for not catching it. But then again, not everybody watches HBO. On the other hand, I completely agree with [the fictional] Mr. McAvoy's statement."

Oscar and Walt

Forget about Oscar and Felix.  Of Bert and Ernie and Oscar.  What if Oscar Wilde actually had sex with Walt Whitman one afternoon on his famous visit to America?  Well, there's some evidence that they did.  True or not, it is told in a very funny manner here.

When He's 64 (Like, Now)

When I met Bruce Springsteen on MY birthday in 1972 he had just turned 23.  I remember thinking he seemed a bit younger than that.  Anyway, here we are 41 years later, and he turned 64 today.  Even the president sent him greetings.  So in tribute The Beatles original version of "When I'm 64"--in the proper key as recorded.  McCartney, they say, asked it to get cut in a higher key and/or sped up a bit to sound more "rooty tooty" to fit concerpt of the Sgt. Pepper album.   Much prefer this:

The Whore Truth

Correction of the day from London daily paper.  The wonder is that it took more than six weeks to run:

"In our diary article 'Museum finally signs its deal to be fine and dandy' (August 7, 2013) we referred to the exhibition of the late Sebastian Horsley’s suits at the Museum of London and the Whoresley show, an exhibition of his pictures at the Outsiders Gallery. By unfortunate error we referred to Rachel Garley, the late Sebastian Horsley’s girlfriend, who arranged the exhibitions, as a prostitute. We accept that Ms Garley is not and has never been a prostitute. We offer our sincere apologies to Ms Garley for the damage to her reputation and the distress and embarrassment she has suffered as a result." (photo by Nick Cunard)

So Much for Arms Control

On this day in 1949, the U.S. announced--it made the top of the NYT--that it had detected the first Soviet atomic explosion several weeks earlier, see photo at left, which the Soviets thought they'd kept secret.    (Here's how we did it.)  So now the arms race was really.   Truman's refusal to compete with the Soviets rather than cooperate on control of the atom--as the scientists and others suggested--did not keep them from their own weapon, and then the H-bombs (their agents in the U.S. helped that along).   Meanwhile, as I explore in my Atomic Cover-up book,  the U.S. kept the American public largely in the dark on the key aspects of the effects of the bomb, and longterm dangers...

Ray Left His Stamp

New Postal Service "forever" stamp for Brother Ray goes on sale today.

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Next: The Thin Red Lion?

Kitty ventures outside for first time, as filmed by Terrence Meowlick in his inimitable style.  (h/t Andy Mitchell)


Terrence Meowlick from Knock Bang Boom on Vimeo.

WikiLeaks Reviews WikiLeaks Film

The Fifth Estate is finally about to open, after debut at Toronto film fest, and no surprise, WikiLeaks folks, as far as we know, not happy with it.  They've obtained various scripts including what they say was the  near-final one and claim friends saw it in Toronto and noted a late change or two--so in any case they are, they say, basing their critique on the finished film, more or less.  Read the script and the critique details here.   Besides claiming inaccuracies about DDB and his role and deeds, there's this:
  • Julian Assange was never in a cult, but THE FIFTH ESTATE claims that he was.
  • Julian Assange does not dye or bleach his hair white, as claimed in the film.
  • While these interpolations may serve to enhance the dramatic narrative of the film, or to build an enigmatic or interesting central character, they have the effect of further falsely mythologizing a living person as sinister and duplicitous.
Trailer below:

Naturally Hicks Is There

UPDATE:   NYT with Q & A with Hicks on how he did it.  Was at framing shop next door when it went down.  Wife brought helmet and added camera equipment from home pronto.  Amazing.

Earlier: Tyler Hicks, who always somehow seems to be at the hottest of hot spots and war zones when things explode, did it again today, improbably being just outside the mall in Nairobi when the bomb went off.  NYT has gallery of his shots here.   Includes up-close photos of dead bodies and police with guns drawn.

Beached

The Beach Boys offer, "Summer's Gone."

Kristof Still Wants War

Sunday update:  Believe it or not, the sequel to the sequel: In new column, Kristof AGAIN calls for air strikes against Assad forces, despite the chem weapons agreement. 

Wednesday update:   Believe it or not, the sequel:  In his new column today, from refugee camp, Kristof STILL comes out for U.S. airstrikes, despite our apparent win on maybe getting rid of Assad's chemical weapons.  Yes, I get the humanitarian impulse, but he continues to appear blind to the likely negative after-effects. 

Earlier:  Believe it or not, Nick Kristof, often admirable in the past, in new column tonight, is still calling for bombing Syria.  He argues that we simply must oppose crossing red lines in the use of inhumane weapons--yet in earlier column he supported the use of atomic bombs against Japan, killing at least 120,000 women and children and 50,000 others (and see my book here).  Kristof's hero Nelson Mandela pointed out how U.S. STILL suffers--around the world--from stain of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

In today's column (in a separate note he reveals it was written as the deal to get rid of Assad's arsenal was just about wrapped up), Kristof makes this argument:
A missile strike on Syrian military targets would result in no supplemental budget, so money would come from the existing military pot. In any case, the cost of 100 missiles would be about $70 million — far less than the $1 billion annual rate that we’re now spending on humanitarian aid for Syrians displaced by worsening war and by gas attacks.
If a $70 million strike deters further gas attacks and reduces the ability of President Bashar al-Assad to bomb civilians, that might actually save us money in humanitarian spending.
Also notice how he is charging Assad with "presiding over" deaths of 100,000, even though most counts claim the rebels have slain up to half that number.   And admits "some" of the rebels "are vile."   Maybe three or four, you know. Artful.

Finally, he dishonestly  ignores the fact that if Obama had followed his call last week (and that of his colleague, Bill Keller) and started firing cruise missiles we would have already no doubt killed an untold number of innocent Syrians.  Also  we would not have the current agreement to get rid of all of Syria's chemical agents without bloodshed--which our bombing would not have come close to accomplishing.   Also, this agreement will, if carried out,  eliminate the chance of those weapons falling into al-Qaeda hands.  Also, there will be no Assad retaliatory strikes and our bombs will not inflame much of the rest of the Muslim world against us.

In a tweet yesterday, Kristof crowed that the "threat" of bombing that he backed was working and this produced the Syria/Russia offer.  Fair enough except--if Obama had actually gone ahead with the bombing already, as Kristof wished, there would have been no such offer. 

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Garland of Poses

I knew songwriter/singer Garland Jeffreys a little back in the mid-1970s in the West Village, just after his heralded debut solo album (which had some reggae-influenced stuff)  came out and we raved in Crawdaddy.  You might know his song "Ghost Writer" from his acclaimed 2nd disc.   Fun guy, good guy.  Now he's written an op-ed just posted at NYT on his songwriting process forty years later.   Here's one of best songs from that debut, which was supposed to be a hit single:

Friday, September 20, 2013

Uppie No Downer

So let's mark the birth on this date, in 1878,  of Upton Sinclair, famed socialist muckraking novelist (and one of the best-known Americans around the world during his heyday), author of The Jungle and--leftwing candidate in what I called "The Campaign of the Century" in my Random House book of that title, when he led grassroots crusade for governor or California in 1934.  He won the Democratic primary in a landslide--and to defeat him, big business, Hollywood and conservative Dems and GOPers went out and invented the modern political campaign, turning their dirty tricks over to a new breed of "spin doctors" and "political consultants."  And Irving Thalberg created the first "attack ads" for the screen.  To see them, and much more, go here. 

Why Smart Phones Are Toxic...

For kids and sad adults, like Louis CK, as he explains (with some help from Springsteen).

Troy Davis, Two Years On

Two years ago tomorrow Troy Davis was executed in the most controversial state killing of this decade.  Democracy Now! is marking it today with a special programs and posting an excerpt from new I Am Troy Davis book.   My own e-book on the history of capital punishment in the USA--right up to the Davis case--is available here.

Guns: The View from Abroad

The great Charles P. Pierce has been in Ireland, sitting in pubs and visiting the race tracks and all those other fun things.  But he weighs in today on the view of epic gun violence from abroad.  Read the whole thing, it's not long, but here's the closer:
But this kind of thing -- an armed madman obtaining deadly weapons legally -- is so pointless that it seems alien. It seems to be taking place in an alternate reality. Other countries simply don't have these events. Or if they do, they have them so rarely that when one occurs, as it did in Australia, the country gets very tough on firearms and changes its laws. The Teachable Moments actually teach something. It is more than odd to be sitting in another country, watching the news scroll by, and to realize that your country, the one that your grandparents braved a leaky boat and the North Atlantic to get to, is a country that has several of these events every couple of years, and accepts them as part of the cost of those essential freedoms your grandparents sought. From this vantage, it is very much like my country is part of another world.

Chicago Mass Shootings

Just reported,  at least 11 gunned down in Chicago at one site tonight, on or near a basketball court, including a kid, age 3--at least four in critical condition and five serious.   Local TV report here includes footage. Updates here. Locals call it "Chiraq."  See Twitter feed of local reporter:  @Schlikerman


The Napalm Girl, the Photographer and The Crop

Michael Shaw has long run a very valuable blog on photographic images, usually related to news or politics, called Bag News.  He has a terrific post now on the famous Nick Ut photo from Vietnam of the girl running from a napalm attack (she has already been hit), Phan Thi Kim Phuc.   Like me, he was not aware of the major cropping that it got right away and forever--the rightward one-third (see left).   Michael thought it interesting that what was cropped out (quite deliberately?) was a U.S. military photog fiddling with his camera, seemingly unconcerned with the terror of the children near him.

But see the comments section below the story.  Of course, some say it was simply and wisely cropped to emphasize the main action.  Then someone says the photog on the right was a well-known U.S. journo named David Burnett who was re-loading film and he can't be blamed for that.  Then Burnett himself  arrives to say, no, it is a Vietnamese photog.  Then someone else say he spots a U.P.I. stencil on the helmet.  Anyway, read the whole thing.  (Film footage of the same burned girl, and a burned baby.)


Thursday, September 19, 2013

Rebel Rebel

Tonight from (who else?) McClatchy, a much-needed dose of reality for the McCains and Kristofs of the world.  Yes, it's not just Assad vs. the U.S. backed "rebels"--the Islamist extremist are also attacking them.
On Wednesday, extremists captured the north Syrian town of Azaz, killing eight Free Syrian Army troops and support personnel and effectively blocking a primary supply route from the nearby Turkish border to Free Syrian Army forces in Aleppo. Turkey closed the border crossing Thursday, while Free Syrian Army forces battled to regain control.
Fierce fighting also was reported in Deir el Zour, close to the Iraqi border, where extremists reportedly captured a number of Free Syrian Army fighters.
The confrontation had been growing all summer between the Islamists, who took control of large parts of eastern Syria early this year, and the Free Syrian Army, which has been begging the U.S. for arms so it can seize territory from the Assad regime and displace the radicals.

Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2013/09/19/202655/us-backed-syrian-rebels-being.html#.Uju2iSTmXw4#storylink=cpy

Why Didn't D.C. Shooter Buy That AR-15?

Late Thursday Update:  NYT just now corrected article.  However, they did not change Michael Schmidt's claim that the shooter tried to buy the AR-15 and was stopped by the law, and that is the key part.  But if not prevented because he was out of state, as they'd falsely reported, then why?  Here's the correction:  "An article on Wednesday about the gunman in the Navy Yard shooting, using information from senior law enforcement officials, misstated a provision in Virginia state gun law. Out-of-state buyers must provide additional forms of identification to purchase a high-capacity AR-15 rifle; the laws do not prohibit the sales of all AR-15 rifles to all out-of-state residents."

Thursday Update:   Just saw another cable news report that states as fact that gun control law worked in Virginia to keep shooter from buying AR-15.  NYT has not changed its story.  This is a major claim so it will be interesting to see if it holds up, despite the below. 

Update: Talking Points Memo talked to same lawyer I mentioned below and now he denies that Alexis tried to buy the AR-15.  Mediaite talked to a salesman at the store who says the same.  We'll see if that holds up and NYT corrects story.

Earlier: Interesting media tussle now over the question:   Did Aaron Alexis try to buy an assault rifle at that Virginia shooting range and if he did why didn't he end up with one?   If he did have an AR-15 on MOnday--instead of the shotgun he did buy, with only 24 shells--the death toll almost certainly would have been much higher.

The NYT, as I noted last night, broke the story that he had fired off a few rounds from the assault rifle at the range but was prevented from buying it because Virginia state law restricts such sales to out-of-staters.  So he bought the shotgun.  They even feature the role of the law right in the headline ("State Law Prevented Sale.....")  But a Washington Times reporter, who has used the shooting range in the past, charged  that there is no such law in Virginia and her sources claim Aaron didn't even try to buy the AR-15, and she demanded the Times correct its story.   It has not.   This morning the CBS News site has a story that falls somewhere in-between, stating that he did try to buy weapon but was rebuffed--for an unknown reason.  NBC said a lawyer for the shooting range/gun store said he didn't know if Alexis did try to purchase the AR-15.

Surely the owner of the range will clear this up soon.

Jon on Guns

Stewart tried again last night.


Hitting Obamacare--With Uncle Sam as Pervert Doctor

You may not believe your eyes (or, given the atmosphere today, maybe you will), but check out one of the creepiest commercials ever, the first in a promised series by a major anti-Obamacare group.  It features a young woman who has just signed up for coverage spreading her legs in the doctor's office for an OB-GYN exam--and a leering Uncle Sam doctor pops up between them.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Sudsy Work But Someone's Got to Do It

But did you expect it to be James Fallows?  He not only sought out the home of the (consensus?) best beer made in the USA, but took some photos (before he keeled over, maybe) and just wrote about it  at The Atlantic.  Admits it is Beer Porn. Still won't reveal how company got its name or name of brew.  And you might have to drive to plant to buy any.

Father Along

Cool new political ad for young guy running for Congress--featuring his father, who is a Tea Partier.

Raise High the Box Office, Carpenters

Weinstein company announces it will release this week an updated "special edition" of its not-so-special J.D. Salinger doc, adding detail about his relationship with very young women over the years.  Seems inspired by criticism from one of those women, who is featured in the doc, that the film downplays the emotional damage he did to the women.  Also, Weinstein now promises a drama also on Salinger, pre-Catcher.  Milking it.

Fly Like An Eagle

What you'd see if you could ride on the back of an eagle for a couple of minutes in the mountains.  Don't know back story, but Geek has some here, video below.  We'll presume no-eagles-were-harmed-in-the-making-of-this-film.  No claim yet that it's faked.   You do see a shadow on the ground near the end.  Also hear a couple of little "squawks."  (Note: John Ashcroft's classic tribute, h/t Tommy Vietor.)

Obama Orders Strike Against...Ginger Cat?

As purr orders. 

Hot Commercial

This heartwarming-plus-noodles Thai TV spot, for a mobile company, is worldwide sensation, with 7.7 million hits in one YouTube version (with subtitles) alone.

Tom Friedman Goes Pink

There have been a lot of classic ledes for Tom Friedman over the year but today's may take the cake--or the Swiss chocolate in this case.  At least he didn't ask the cashier for his common man opinion on a big subject, his usual manner.  Here we go:
I was at a conference in Bern, Switzerland, last week and struggling with my column. News of Russia’s proposal for Syria to surrender its poison gas was just breaking and changing every hour, forcing me to rewrite my column every hour. To clear my head, I went for a walk along the Aare River, on Schifflaube Street. Along the way, I found a small grocery shop and stopped to buy some nectarines. As I went to pay, I was looking down, fishing for my Swiss francs, and when I looked up at the cashier, I was taken aback: He had pink hair. A huge shock of neon pink hair — very Euro-punk from the ’90s. While he was ringing me up, a young woman walked by, and he blew her a kiss through the window — not a care in the world.
Observing all this joie de vivre, I thought to myself: “Wow, wouldn’t it be nice to be a Swiss? Maybe even to sport some pink hair?” Though I can’t say for sure, I got the feeling that the man with pink hair was not agonizing over the proper use of force against Bashar al-Assad. Not his fault; his is a tiny country. I guess worrying about Syria is the tax you pay for being an American or an American president — and coming from the world’s strongest power that still believes, blessedly in my view, that it has to protect the global commons. Barack Obama once had black hair. But his is gray now, not pink. That’s also the tax you pay for thinking about the Middle East too much: It leads to either gray hair or no hair, but not pink hair. 

Meeting Roy Orbison--and a Springsteen Connection

Folks, as some may know, I finished my first novel (see first chapter at that link) about a month ago and today I am wrapping up a memoir of my many years at the legendary Crawdaddy, for nearly all of the 1970s.   It's, of course, a very personal look at the decade, from rock 'n roll to film,  politics and social protest, titled This Ain't No Disco.   Here's the current Intro and, below, small excerpt, about meeting Roy Orbison in 1974, more than a decade after I helped organize a local chapter of his fan club in junior high.  The book, of course, includes for the first time the full story of meeting Spirngsteen--in Sing Sing--and 1972 and then helping to write the first major piece about him (and our friendship for years after). 
**
Not sure how it happened, but it came to my attention at Crawdaddy that Roy had finally signed with a new label, Mercury, after ten years with faltering MGM, the label that had seemingly driven him off the rails after he signed a mega-deal with them (he even starred in a crappy movie) after “Pretty Woman.”  When I contacted Mercury’s publicity director, he told me Roy was going to Chicago to talk to the press about an upcoming “comeback” album.  Would I like to meet him there? 
     Naturally, I said yes.  What a story.  Back when he could still hit the highs, lick the lows and invigorate the in-betweens, Roy had sold 30 million records.  He helped keep rock alive in the early 1960s before the British invasion, and played top bill to the Beatles and Rolling Stones in England.  On the other hand, he’d lost his wife Claudette in a motorcycle accident—after he named a hit he wrote for the Everly Brothers after her—and two kids in a fire, and hadn’t been high on the charts in over ten years.
    In Chicago—my first trip there since surviving the ’68 Democratic convention and “police riot”—the publicist introduced me to a very polite Orbison, already in trademark sunglasses on a dark night,  at the hotel.  Then we drove off together in a limo to dine with Mercury execs and then hit a club show starring Ray Manzarek, the former keyboard hinge of the Doors.   It turned out that the “Caruso of rock” was incredibly soft-spoken. “Oh, isn’t that awful?” Roy asked incredulously, barely glancing at the old, wrinkled fan club photo that I produced out of my shoulder bag. Actually, he didn’t look all that different from the guy in the photo, except he’d put on a few pounds, was wearing shades instead of horn rims, and had combed his pompadour over his forehead, as if still paying homage to his friends, The Beatles.
    When we got to the restaurant, the P.R. guy pulled me aside and advised, “Keep it clean—they tell me he’s very religious. And don’t mention the accidents [involving his wife and kids].  They really destroyed him.”  The dinner took place on the 91st floor of the new John Hancock building.  Someone from Mercury pointed to a spitball on the ceiling, courtesy (he said) of another act on the label, Rod Stewart.  The menu was in French.  “I’m generally satisfied with cheeseburgers,” Roy revealed.
    Then it was off to a Gold Coast club called PBM for Manzarek and his loose, probably drunken, set.   Joining the entourage was speedy Danny Sugerman, a former rock writer who had managed the Doors after Jim Morrison’s death and was now writing lyrics for Manzarek.  (Danny would later pen a bestselling Doors bio, manage Iggy Pop and marry Fawn Hall—yes, that Fawn Hall, of Oliver North fame). Roy chatted with one of the other members of our group about the cult Antonioni film, Zabriskie Point, which kind of surprised me. A cineaste
    In the ride back to the hotel, Roy said that his musical tastes these days ran to soft-rock or country, and mentioned Olivia Newton-John and Barbara Fairchild.  It was a long way from Jerry Lee Lewis. “Nobody fractures me,” he said.   He had recently attended a concert by his old buddy Elvis Presley in Tennessee, and “it was terrible.”  As for Roy, “Some of those old songs are bad, but we do them bad like they were.”  But he still sang “Crying” as if for the first time:  “I think the secret to my lasting success is that I’m not trying to be too clever, too progressive.”
    Over the next five minutes, Roy told wonderful anecdotes about his interactions with: Elvis, Buddy Holly, Johnny Cash, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Bob Dylan.  How many others in the world could do that?   Sample:  He once made a backstage deal with the Rolling Stones in London before they came to the U.S.  He would sing his worst song, “Ooby Dooby,” from his early days, that night if they would do their worst song.  He kept his end of the bargain, they did not. “So to make up for it,” he added, “Mick gave me a silver cigarette case inscribed with Ooby Dooby.”  
    The cab ride was mercilessly cut short by our arrival at the hotel.  We made plans for meeting the next morning. It was only 11:15, but Roy argued, “I’ve got to go beddy-bye now if I’m going to be any good for you tomorrow.”

The following morning the room-service waiter awakened Roy with a knock and we found him in the darkened room just out of the sack already decked out in his trademark shades.  Roy pulled the curtain open,  then puttered around in his green velvet robe, somewhat less mythic than the night before, the bulk of his body sitting incongruously on pale spindly legs, the diamond ring on the little finger of his right hand gleaming with past success.
    We talked over the table as he ate breakfast, starting with his childhood down in Wink, Texas,  later getting hooked up with Buddy Holly’s producer Norman Petty and then, via Johnny Cash, with the legendary Sun Records boss, Sam Phillips.   More anecdotes.  Buddy Holly was not “uppity.” The Everly Brothers passed on what would become his first giant hit, “Only the Lonely.”  Yes, “Crying” was based on a true story.  When he went to England to top a tour with the emerging Beatles for several weeks, who had not yet come to the U.S., he saw their placards all over town and asked, “What is this crap?” only to discover that John Lennon was standing right behind him.  (Roy, being Roy, had apologized profusely.) 
    Very shortly he grew so impressed with the Beatles—“not technically that good but they had a fresh look”—that he told them to get to America as soon as possible, despite their fears, predicting they’d go over great.  He even turned down a chance to handle their U.S. representation. Then he came home and told everyone, including Brian Wilson, gently, that the Beatles would be the biggest group in America in a few months (“I have the clippings to prove it”). 
    Well, I could have listened to this forever, but I was there to cover his latest comeback, so I asked about the new recording.  At the Mercury office I’d heard the first, countryish, single and, while “Sweet Mama Blue” was very pretty, it lacked  the sock of early Orbison—as if he was still battling to get The Voice back (he’d had some heart ailments).  Roy seemed pretty relaxed about it, perhaps more pleased with the record’s existence than the assurance of major success. And he had never stopped making money from sales and tours abroad, in any case. “I think I’ve got possibly 20 years of good singing and record-making left,” he advised.
    When he got back home, he asked his record company send me an original 78 rpm of “Ooby Dooby.”  Also:  He asked me to write the liner notes for his album (see upper left).  Done and done.
    As it turned out, “Sweet Mama Blue” did, in fact, bomb.  I interviewed Roy again over the phone and he said, “It’s already a hit record to me.  It’s done so much more than what I had done like two years ago. Hit records are important to me, and I don’t want this to sound like a cliché, but I’ve had my share of them.”  No kidding.  But was The Voice still there?  “You’ll have to put this nicely,” he pleaded, “because I’m not egotistical in any sense…the voice is ten times what it ever was.  The Orbison tag, the Big Sound, whatever you call it, it’s all still there.”
    It would take a few more years, but eventually, Roy would prove his voice was still there--with the Traveling Wilburys.

For several weeks, in writing the Orbison article, I had immersed myself in vintage Roy the Boy and was hyping him to all of my friends.  One of them, fatefully, was Bruce Springsteen. 
    A year before his Born to Run breakthrough, Brucie was still far from a household name. Let’s put it this way:  No one called him “The Boss,” not even the band members.  He continued to provoke a rapturous response to his live show, but his second lp, The Wild, the Innocent and the E-Street Shuffle, had inspired so-so reviews and sales.  My rave for that record in Crawdaddy, I was told by one inside source, had helped keep Columbia from dropping him from the label.  That meant they still had him when Jon Landau wrote his career-changing “I’ve seen the future of rock ‘n roll” review of Springsteen live, after seeing Bruce in a Boston club when he was touring between albums.  
    A couple of times, Peter Knobler and I tooled up the Palisades Parkway to visit Bruce at the 914 Studio in tiny Blauvelt, N.Y., where he recorded his first two albums and was starting on Born to Run, with some difficulty.  Work was going very slowly and members of the band sometimes slept overnight in the parking lot. At least there was a diner almost next door.  (In an amazing coincidence, fifteen years later I would move out of New York City with my wife and son—to a house just  over the hill, from the long-shuttered studio.  The diner’s still there, however.) Then Jon Landau started to seize production duties from Mike Appel, and shifted the recording to Manhattan.
    In those days, I’d come down to the Jersey Shore to hang out with Bruce a bit.  One weekend we got up at 5 a.m. to trek out to the famous flea market in Englishtown where we both bought boots.  That night we hit a late showing of the concert film, Let the Good Times Roll, starring Fats Domino, Little Richard and other ’50 stars—Brucie’s favorite musical era.
    Another night, with Peter Knobler, we drove to Philly to visit a club where Miami Steve Van Zandt, who had not yet joined Bruce’s band, was playing with The Dovells (of “Bristol Stomp” fame).  When we arrived there was this quirky surprise: The club, which had seen better days, was not only owned by one of Bruce’s boyhood DJ idols, Jerry “The Geator With the Heater” Blavat, he was also spinning tunes between sets.  The Geator, you might say, was the original “Boss,” as his long ago nickname was “The Boss With the Hot Sauce.”
    Only about three dozen folks were in the audience, but band members were still working the young women crowding the stage. Van Zandt was dressed in a cheap white suit and mugging right along with the Vegas wisecracks from the lead singer (better pay days were to come for Steve).  The rail-thin Geator was also playing to the crowd, sending out Motown and Spector tunes to “The girls from Morristown!” among others between sets. Suddenly he shouted out to the beefy bartender, “Macho Joe!”  Or was that “Nacho Joe”? Then: “Fur burgers!  All you guys got to see these girls from Morristown!” 
    As the Dovells moved back to the stage, Brucie approached the Geator, reached out to shake his hand and introduced himself, after Glavat failed to recognize him. Following a brief chat, the Geator was now pumping Bruce’s hand and pounding him on the back,  announcing to the crowd, “Girls, we got a star here!  My man, my man, Bruce Springsteen!”  A few minutes later, Bruce told us that he sensed Blavat still did not know who he was but had invited him on his local TV show that week. Small potatoes but he was tempted, calling it, with that big laugh, a “once-in-a-lifetime experience.”
    Equally memorable for me: A touch football game with all of the E Streeters, plus Miami Steve and girlfriends on a July 4.  That night Bruce drove me back to New York in his classic ’56 Chevy convertible, busting the speed limit continually. On another occasion, while I  cowered in the back seat of a Jaguar with my date, Knobler challenged Springsteen (in a Galaxy) to a drag race on some dark, nearly-deserted Jersey highway.  Bruce was up for it, and soon both cars were nearly hitting 100.  Approaching a car in front, Knobler eased for safety, giving Brucie (who disappeared into the dark) the win.
    On one visit to Bruce’s  apartment, he sat at an upright piano and knocked out a bit of the tune that would become “Born to Run.” To illustrate how the guitar for it should sound on record, he played an old Searchers song on his cheap phonograph, maybe “Every Time You Walk Into the Room.” He vowed that “Born to Run”  would be his first Top Ten smash, or he’d die trying.
      
When Bruce was in Manhattan, visiting music stores or recording or stopping by the Columbia bunker, he would sometimes stop by the Crawdaddy offices down on Fifth Avenue, and Peter and I would entertain him for awhile.  One day we had an epic “catch” with a tennis ball up and down West 13th Street as his red-haired girlfriend Karen watched, baffled.  Then there was the night we had an extra ticket for the once-a-year Yanks/Mets exhibition game and off we went, sitting behind the screen at Shea Stadium as he rooted like a little kid.  Indeed, he was a former player.  I learned that night what his line “Indians in the summer” from “Blinded By the Light” came from: The Indians were one of his Little League teams.
    One afternoon I took Springsteen  to our room in back that had a sound system and played him most of a Roy Orbison’s Greatest Hits album,  Of course, Bruce was well aware of Roy—and professed to love my Roy profile in the magazine--but, like most people, probably hadn’t heard much of his old hits lately.  He was blown away, and listened to a couple of songs again.  Then I lent him my album.
    Next thing I knew, via the Jersey grapevine: He had made a Roy tape off my album and the E Streeters were playing it on their tour bus all the time.  Bruce started performing Orbison songs during his soundchecks and  encores on stage.  One time I visited him back stage at, of all places, Philharmonic Hall in New York (he was opening for someone) and, across the room, he wordlessly greeted me with the opening notes of “Pretty Woman” on the guitar: Da-da-da-da-dum. My new theme song.
    The following year, lo and behold, what shows up at the start of the opening track “Thunder Road” on Born to Run:  What was destined to be one of Bruce’s most quoted lines ever.  “Roy Orbison singin’ for the lonely/ hey that’s me and I want you only.”  I never got a chance to confirm my role in helping to inspire it, but hey, that’s my story, and I’m sticking to it.
 


Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Fresh Air from Linda Ronstadt

She sat down with Terry Gross today--yes, she can still talk if not sing--and here's the audio.  Plus a lengthy group of excerpts.  On  men, drugs, sex, Emmylou, Hank Williams, more.  And one of my favorite Linda moments below--back in the days before auto-tuning and fake live singing.



Hipster Cop Returns

The NYT in new piece covers today's Occupy rallies in town, marking the 2nd anniversary, and I'm sure some will complain about the allegedly smallish crowds.  Getting the most attention, however, at the end is:  the return of the famous Hipster Cop, Rick Lee, who actually always just had the cool nickname without really looking like a hipster (left).  The Times offers a full report on what he wore today, down to the Brooks Brothers wingtips.

My book on Occupy was first one and still holds up as only day-by-day record (with hundreds of links) of early days: "40 Days That Shook the World."  

'Life of Brian'--The Blockbuster!

As I requested, the fellow who recently did the epic new trailer for Monty Python's silly Holy Grail as a modern action movie has now returned with a similar action film trailer for the Pythons' Jesus H. Christ masterpiece, Life of Brian!   No Biggus Dickus but still a stroke of genius! 



Men At Work (With Hats)

Interesting upcoming doc on iconic photo that captured immigrants taking lunch atop the skyscraper they were building in NYC in 1932--and the broader picture of such immigrants building 20th century New York.

The Shooting Photo That Wasn't

Yesterday about this time, or earlier, thousands were posting or linking to a photo of what was purported to be a victim of the Navy Yard shooting, prone on a nearby sidewalk.  It was the first image that most--nearly all--people saw.  There were actually two photos, via Tim Hogan, one of them at left.  Now it turns out--the photos captured a unrelated drama.  Not the shootings.  Apologies, including from AP, offered.

D.C. Shooting, The Next Day

I did a live-blog all day yesterday (predicting early on that despite all the reports there was just one shooter) and now for the day after, updated from the top.

6:00 This ought to be the story of the day:  We know the shooter was able to buy a shotgun legally in Va. just days before the tragedy.  Now we learn that he tried to buy an assault rifle--but was denied because of law preventing that to out of staters.  And contrary to early reports, he did NOT use an AR-15 in his rampage.  He only had 24 shells for the shotgun he bought.

2:45 Andrea Mitchell tweets:   "NBC reports Newport RI police filed report told them 3 people followed him from Virginia sent vibrations into his body." 

2:00 p.m.  Police and FBI presser:  Police chief says police at building and returning fire within 7 minutes of first call...Shooter killed soon.   But carefully worded so possible he did shoot himself.  She talks of "final shots" and "final engagement." More reports of shooter using handguns and shotgun, not AR-15 (which was found nearby, source unknown)....Shotgun bought lawfully.

12:35  Pete Williams of NBC reports that police now feel it's possible that Alexis used two handguns and shotgun, and no AR-15.

11:30  Sports writer Mike Lupica on AR-15 as hunting rifles--for hunting humans.  "Lanza used one. James Holmes used one in Aurora, Colo. Aaron Alexis was found dead with one on Monday. Sometimes tactical use can mean movie theaters, elementary schools and, it appears, the famous Washington Naval Yard....This time the ones at the Washington Navy Yard were the hunted. They were the sport."

9:00 NYT on shooter's Navy record, and nearly getting a dishonorable discharge for various "misbehavior." 

8:30  CNN reports the shooter made contact with the VA twice recently re: "psychological issues."  AP says sources tell them he had been treated by VA for paranoia and "hearing voices" in his head--but still had that security clearance.  Also in dispute with employer over money. 

Monday, September 16, 2013

Happiness Is...

...a Warm Gun, for so many.  Here's recently re-mastered Beatles.

The Devil's Right Hand

On this day where gun violence strikes D.C. in its first massacre in quite awhile:  Mama said the pistol is the devil's right hand. Will get you into trouble but won't get you out.   Johnny Cash covers Steve Earle classic.  Then Steve, as young man, does it.

'Expert' on Syria Cited by Kerry Paid by Rebels

Monday Sept. 16 Update:  Now O'Bagy apologizes, admits she wasn't even enrolled in Ph.D program ever. 

Wednesday Update:   And now another shoe drops-- today she is fired for falsely claiming she held a Ph.D.    And Jake Tapper compares the whole episode to (ouch) Wag the Dog, which at least had Willie Nelson and Dustin Hoffman as Robert Evans.  Frank Rich just tweeted:  Will WSJ retract and critique her as NYT did with Judy Miller?   Remember, they failed to disclose her affiliation in its authors blurb. 

UPDATE  WSJ now acknowledges.  "Ms. O'Bagy is affiliated with the Syrian Emergency Task Force, a nonprofit operating as a 501(c)(3) pending IRS approval that subcontracts with the U.S. and British governments to provide aid to the Syrian opposition."

Earlier: I noted earlier that the author of a WSJ article last week claiming--against most evidence--that the rebels in Syria are actually overwhelmingly moderate and growing in numbers was paid by a hawkish neo-con think-tank.  Still, her report was cited as gospel by Kerry, McCain and many others.  Now we learn that she is also paid by the Syria rebels themselves.  "In addition to her work for the Institute for the Study of War, O’Bagy is also the political director for the Syrian Emergency Task Force (SETF), a group that advocates within the United States for Syria’s rebels — a fact that the Journal did not disclose in O’Bagy’s piece."

UN Releases Syria Chem Attack Report

It's here, and 41 pages.  For one thing:  85% of blood samples showed Sarin.  Includes reports on, and photos of, rockets, and measuring of trajectories in two cases.  I don't see any estimate of total deaths and injuries.  More TK.


Live Blog on Shootings at U.S. Navy Yard in D.C.

UPDATING from top:

10:20  Police chief says lifting shelter-in-place for everyone in area feeling missing 2nd man no threat and sole shooter dead....BTW, shooter's rental car found near Navy Yard.  Nothing new on weapons (see below).  FBI says he had "valid pass" for access to Navy Yard.   

10:00 Mike Isikoff on MSNBC with first shooter-was-obsessed-with-violent-video games meme.   Though added, a long way from carrying out massacre.  We'll see more of this now.

9:20  Pete Williams of NBC:  Shooter purchased shotgun recently--in Virginia.  May have shot his way in today and got handgun and AR-15 from safe.  But others report how he got weapons unclear.

9:05 p.m.  Now we learn that shooter was arrested in Seattle 2004 after he shot out tires on car in street near his home.  Police found a Glock in his home.  He claimed he was suffering from effects of doing rescue work at Ground Zero earlier, which his father seems to have confirmed.  Despite two shooting incidents he got into Navy Reserves and worked with Navy contractors and got security clearances....

7:15 Hewlett-Packard says Aaron worked for one of its firms, The Experts: “We are deeply saddened by today’s tragic events at the Washington Navy Yard. Our thoughts and sympathies are with all those who have been affected. Aaron Alexis was an employee of a company called ‘The Experts,’ a subcontractor to an HP Enterprise Services contract to refresh equipment used on the Navy Marine Corps Intranet (NMCI) network. HP is cooperating fully with law enforcement as requested.”

5:35 Another friend of shooter with interesting comments on learning Thai language, meditating at Buddhist temple--but being tightly wound, left Navy abruptly, said someone didn't like him. 

4:50  Two staffers at Fort Worth Star-Telegram recall D.C. alleged shooter waiting on them at local Thai eatery.  One calls him "geeky," the other "very sweet." He stayed in Thailand for awhile.

4:35 Wow, great and not expected statement from chief of hospital, saying repeatedly "something evil...something wrong" in America, leading to mass shootings--didn't say what but said we need "to work together to get rid of it." Wants to see her trauma center "put out of business."  You know what she means, reading between the lines. "Just can't have one more shooting with so many people killed."  Let's get rid of this.  This is not America." Except, of course, it IS America. 

4:20  New police briefing:  Confirm one suspect ruled out.  Other man still missing.  No motive known.  Now 13 dead.  Baseball game off.   Confirms shooter is Aaron Alexis, 34, and posted photos at FBI.gov.   Want to learn his recent movements and associates.   

4:10  Fort Worth paper with much more on shooter.  He lived there up to 8 months ago.  Was computer guy with contractor.  Lived in Flushing, N.Y. about ten years ago. 

4:05  Reddit bans sub-Reddit thread on trying to ID and find the missing guy with gun.  You'll recall they had very active threat during search for Boston Bombers which eventually was shut down after wrong people named. 

3:35  NBC reports alleged gunman arrested previously for weapons firing. Also see mugshot for him in that arrest.  

2:50  CNN: white suspect IDed and now cleared.  No surprise. 

2:40  Pete Williams at MSNBC says shooter IDed as man,34, from Texas who was recently hired as civilian contractor by Navy.  Names him as Aaron Alexis but I don't see others confirming that.

2:20:  Confusing:  Badge ID found next to gunman was not his but for a guy dismissed recently at Navy Yard, who has been taken into custody.   Could be nothing or claim that guy gave gunman his badge.

2:05 D.C. police chief briefing:  one cop still being treated.   12 confirmed dead.  Several officers injured.  FBI taking lead now.  On "lookout" for the two missing:  white male between 40 to 50 yrs old, tan Navy uniform and beret,  black male, same age, olive military uniform.  Believe "involved in some way" but not clear.   "No indication of motive." Won't say if victims found in more than one building, which would be key.

1:55  Now Pete Williams reports of eight dead and 16 wounded.  No updates on the two missing men.  Navy SEAL on CNN just now says it men spotted with weapons either bad guys or police--military at Navy Yard don't carry around weapons in view.

12:45  Pete Williams: no confirmation of another gunman firing.  Two others might be military.  Witnesses and video spotted them but could be people not at all involved w/ tragedy. 

12:25 MSNBC guest suggests the two missing "gunmen" might just be military personnel/cops  who pulled out guns when shooting began. White House reporter says odd that no step up of security if there is two "gunmen" on the loose. 

12:12  Mayor and police presser.  D.C. chief is a woman.  One shooter dead.  Multiple victims deceased.  "Potentially have 2 others shooters."  One white and one black.  One in fatigues and beret. May be wearing military uniforms but not military.  One had handgun and one had long gun--spotted at time of incident early on but might not be part of case and unconfirmed but search is on.  Quite possibly one "shooter" but two others "potentially" on scene--although could turn out not part of this. Might be benign explanation, or not.

12:10  Wash Post just now changed story from "at least 2 shooters" to "as many as 2 shooters."

12:00  Pete Williams still holding with one shooter, man in 50s, probably workplace issue, no terrorism at all.   Yet Jake Tapper and Barbara Starr still with the "two gunmen down" just now.  Wash Post still reporting flatly "at least two shooters" and one shooted "pinned down" in another building.   Cable news strategy: offer false reports, then claim "the situation is liquid."  Too much drinking booze beforehand?  

11:45  Police pre-presser:  Update in 20 minutes but briefly shoot down rumor that there was a shooting at Bolling Air Force Base nearby. 

11:40  AP reports the gunman, or one gunman, is dead.  NBC also says dead.

11:35  Hospital briefing:  Have received 3 victims to be operated on,  severe injuries but conscious,  one of them a cop,  two of them female, "more victims" at scene including a cop.

11:25  Pete Williams still offering caveat that report of 2nd gunman still could be wrong.  So many conflicting reports.  Police may be shooting locks to open building....Others reporting that two shooters both "down," possibly one dead.   

11:10  NBC now reports police enter 2nd building after shots fired from there-- the 2nd gunman?  I'm still predicting will turn out one shooter.

11:05  Exactly 8 hours from now Braves vs. Nats game at D.C. park--just blocks from shooting scene. 

10:55  Note how Wash Post handles witnesses IDing gunman as "black male."  One of the witnesses they note is also black....New reports of shots just fired.  

10:50  Wash Post holding to multiple shooters--but cut number from three to two.  With one still at large, or could be trapped in stairwell.   NBC4 in D.C. also reporting two gunmen but one wonders if it's simply that one gunman moved from floor to floor....CNN and MSNBC still downplaying that. 

10:40  Police knocking down reports of 3 shooters.  Wash Post perhaps way out of line on that.

10:20  Wash Post blog says police claim may be 3 shooters, 2 at large, one in fatigues.  Not confirmed elsewhere, although an NBC reporter had reported this in a very shaky manner.  Navy will neither confirm nor deny.

10:15  NBC's Jim Miklazewski says 12 shot and gunman only "cornered," not captured.   Seems to be "barricaded" in room.  

10:05  WRC reports 4 dead, 10 total victims, gunman "down."  Still, amazing that all flights on hold at Reagan Airport, Wash Post reports.  

10 a.m.  Pete Williams suggesting incident more or less over.  Gunman shot about 9:30.  Not known if alive or dead.  IDed as "black male." Not known if military or civilian.

Pete Williams of NBC:  now 7 victims, with one fed and one local police officer.  Gunman with AR-15.

Earlier:   Started at 8:20 ET.    Reporter from there on scene just heard more shots (at 9:15 ET) and report of "officer down."  At 9:25, WUSA reports police confirm 5 wounded, including one cop.  Wash Post says "all critical."   Photo of one victim on pavement by Tim Hogan via Twitter at left, who was allegedly shot as gunman arrived at building 197.   Live EMS audio feed.

Site is just blocks from Nationals baseball park. Unconfirmed reports have gunman with a shotgun and rifle and in building 197, a headquarters building and very large.  NBC reporter on scene claims gunman may be on roof of building.   People there told to "shelter in place" but they are phoning out to say "several" wounded.  Unconfirmed.

Official Navy release earlier:
An active shooter was reported inside the Naval Sea Systems Command Headquarters building (Bldg. 197) on the Washington Navy Yard at 8:20 a.m. (Eastern Time).

There is one confirmed injury. Emergency personnel are on scene and a "shelter in place" order has been issued for Navy Yard personnel.

The Naval Sea Systems Command's headquarters is the work place for about 3,000 people.