Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Wingmen, take flight

I will not be your wingman.

If you think it's a good idea to place me in that position, you're self-destructive. Five minutes after meeting me, it's obvious that I'd rather enjoy some good-natured chaos than a chat about interests. As a necessary corollary, I'd rather throw the night into disarray than see one of my friends enjoy some lovin'.

Not only will I not help you -- I will intentionally sabotage you for my own enjoyment.

It's not selfishness. I’ll help you move and pick up bar tabs without complaining. But I'm easily bored. Carrying someone else's dead weight so a friend can get laid: that is not interesting. I can't do it, no matter how much I might want to help you, no matter how lonely or horny you are.

My best moment came a few years ago when a benign but conservative roommate was talking to a nice schoolteacher our age. Their chat was taking too long, and I was stuck speaking to the schoolteacher's friend.

"He told you that he's a right-wing Republican, right?" I said loudly.

The schoolteacher immediately lost interest. I was amused. My friend was not. By my rules, that means that I won.

The Washington Post would not agree.

Joining the Times's race to the bottom is The Washington Post, which today published an article with thousands of words about some crazy new "phenomenon" where single guys position themselves as a "wingman."

This article is a classic in a genre perfected by the Times's style writers. The writer can't sound too enthusiastic because that will make the publication read like "Sassy." Instead, we get overwriting in a voice that falls between snark and sociology. The writers attempt to read cultural significance into worthless moments. When written by talented people, this is New Journalism. When written by judgmental, spazzy hacks, it's Fucking Bullshit Journalism.

The genre of Fucking Bullshit Journalism had its War and Peace in a New York Times Styles section article about dudes who jerk each other off in lockerrooms, and its Madame Bovary in that paper's article about rich men who asexually skinnydip together at an exclusive WASP social club.

Today, a Post reporter named Laura Sessions Stepp published this genre's Great Expecations.

Stepp begins by mocking a relatively normal-sounding college guy. Here's how she sets the scene:
The young suitor is neatly dressed all in black, his long-sleeved shirt tucked into pressed cotton trousers. In this casual crowd of colorful polo shirts and frayed jeans, he might as well be wearing a sign that says, "Trying too hard." As he presses his end of the conversation, the beauty nods slightly but her eyes roam the room. He ignores her friend, whose pout grows ever more pronounced. If anyone ever needed a wingman, this guy is it.
Hey, Stepp -- you're an asshole. The guy's in college. Cut him some slack. I don't know what you were doing in college. It apparently didn't involve getting laid or learning how to write. You spent a lot of time with uninterested wingmen and coloring books, and I'm sorry for that. But most 21- or 22-year-old guys -- even the ones getting a lot of action -- don't quite have their act together, and don't need a tool like you ripping on them.

Already, I can tell that your article might as well be wearing a headline that says, "Trying too hard."

Stepp gives a pop-culture history of wingmen. It includes "Top Gun," Coors, and Toby Keith. Next, there is a befuddled, I Am Charlotte Simmons-style explanation of college decadence:
Exams are over, graduation is approaching and each of them has several young women on his year-end wish list. (Some senior women, by the way, keep similar lists.) Once they start work in the real world, clubbing will become an occasional thing as opposed to a four-night-a-week addiction. They may actually have to ask women out on dates, take them to dinner. Wingman skills will still be needed, but not as often. Bummer.
At college, a good wingman has been as important as a popped-collar shirt. This is a generation that, in large part, dismisses the idea of courtship. Many move fast through relationships: face-booking, instant-messaging, text-messaging.
"Bummer."? You Bill and Ted-loving, uncreative freak.

Also, the fact that you think popped-collar shirts are "important" "[a]t college" makes you a moron. A minor fad at best.

Then something interesting happens, even though it's accidental. Like Stepp, the boys she's following have plenty of bad ideas:
Jentz picks up: "Sometimes you're a lawyer. You may only have taken one law class, but what the heck? It adds flavor, gets people excited."

Moniello says his hometown wingman -- good wingman relationships never die -- is as adept as they come. "If I go to the bathroom, he'll make me look like Jesus. . . . The girl I'm after will say something like 'I hear he's a player' and he'll convince her I'm really in love with her."
True, all women consider lawyers highly desireable, but I've never heard about how going to the bathroom makes people look like Jesus. If true, it would not be a good thing. None of my chick friends have expressed a desire to meet, date and hump the Christ.

(Relatedly, I recently argued that no human being could survive being humped by an angel -- that an angel would by definition be so overpowering that coitus with it would destroy the human body. But I digress.)

Next comes an overlong narrative that seems to treat wingmen as a cognizable interest group, with accompanying stories about romantic follies, mistaken identities, and modest hijinks that sound unremarkable to anyone who lived in a freshman dorm.

Stepp then seems to fear that her article will be interpreted as misogynistic. (It's not, it's just retarded.) For cover, she writes about how some girls have wingwomen, and that "girls can give as good as they get."

Then, more rudderless blow-by-blow descriptions of college kids hanging out. Stepp works in some final condescension.
With only minutes to go to last call, Jentz trolls the place with a near-empty beer pitcher in his hand, shirttail out, single and increasingly melancholy. Waclawiczek, shirt tucked in, gelled hair in place, has stationed himself near the door. Moniello, designated wingman, continues to scout the crowd on behalf of his buddies and himself, drawing lots of hugs and kisses but little else.

Even the ablest of wingmen can't guarantee a win.
I'll take her several steps further, and posit that the idea of effective wingmen are worthless.

Here's what's puzzling: There have been multiple nights when I've acted like the anti-wingman, yet between 2 and 4 a.m., I look up to see that Flop is Frenching a girl. Usually that girl is several steps superior to what one would consider his realistic target group.

Not only can someone like Flop entice women without a wingman, but he does so with me crashing around, doing my best to function as a liability. (To be accurate, it's not just me -- pretty much all of our friends fit that description.) And if the Flops of the world can pull it off, I'm sure cool guys who use hair gel and wear shirts with buttons can manage just fine.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

57 guilty pleasures

The flip side to my most recent list of 57. Here are 57 things that I recognize as total nonsense, yet can't resist. Some of them have been known to turn me into an adorable little puppy, while others precipitate a spazfest.

Totally stupid? Yes they are. That's a guilty pleasure.

This is installment 11 in the Lists of 57 Project.
  1. 227 reruns
  2. 311, "Down"
  3. Amen reruns
  4. Bacon
  5. Better than Ezra, "Good"
  6. Barenaked Ladies, "Brian Wilson"
  7. Big Brother
  8. Bon Jovi, "Livin' on a Prayer"
  9. Brady Bunch reruns
  10. Belinda Carlisle
  11. Cereal
  12. Cheetos
  13. Chumbawumba, "Tubthumper"
  14. Children of the Corn
  15. Cinderella, "Somebody Save Me"
  16. Culture Club, "Karma Chamelion"
  17. Cypress Hill, "Insane in the Brain"
  18. Charlie Daniels, "Devil Went Down to Georgia"
  19. John Denver, "Thank God I'm a Country Boy"
  20. Dunkin' Donuts
  21. The Dog Whisperer
  22. Eagle Eyed Cherry, "Save Tonight"
  23. Floss
  24. Good Times reruns
  25. The Goonies
  26. The Grateful Dead
  27. Hanson, "MMM-Bop"
  28. He-Man and the Masters of the Universe DVDs
  29. Don Henley, "The End of the Innocence"
  30. Hooting
  31. Hot dogs for dinner
  32. Claire Huxtable
  33. Cliff Huxtable
  34. Billy Idol, "Dancing With Myself"
  35. Jackass
  36. Karaoke
  37. Ted Knight
  38. DJ Kool, "Let Me Clear My Throat"
  39. Leave it to Beaver reruns
  40. Less Than Zero
  41. Marlboro Lights
  42. Monica Lewinsky
  43. The Macarena
  44. The McLoughlin Group
  45. Oasis
  46. OMC, "How Bizarre"
  47. The Real Cancun
  48. The Real World-Road Rules Challenges
  49. Shooting rubber bands at people
  50. Cat Stevens, "Peace Train"
  51. Stomping
  52. Terms of Endearment
  53. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (original version)
  54. Three's Company reruns
  55. Too Close For Comfort reruns
  56. Rubbing other people's heads
  57. Viva La Bam

Monday, May 29, 2006

Hey, good lookin'

As you can see, I've been playing with the layout of the site a little bit. That basically consisted of googling for Blogger templates, customizing this one, and learning some very basic code to tweak the design.

My one gripe with this layout is how comments are registered. Notice the number next to the post title? Click there to leave a comment. It took me awhile to figure this out.

Because the number of comments is so prominently displayed, having a big fat zero will make me feel like a failure. So comment away.

I also did this without Flop's approval, so if he objects, we'll be back to the old look soon.

The photo in the banner is one I took over the weekend. It seems like as good a summary for our site as any: everybody's anonymous, New York is in the background, beer bottles rest on the ledge, and you can't tell if people are having a serious conversation or just a good time.

How does it look? Too busy? Font too small? Let me know.

Happy Memorial Day

There was a kick-ass night of drinking, grilling, talking, mocking and listening to tunes.

I need to get myself a rooftop.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

The Top 50 Conservative Rock Songs

The Rude Pundit has some quiet, subtle thoughts on a National Review list that believes it has identified 50 "conservative" rock songs. The entire list, with additional analysis, is available here.

This list is stunning, in a deluded, pathetic, completely deranged kind of way. The Napoleon Dynamite-like effort (awkward and earnest and explosively humiliating) recasts some of the canonical songs of the past 50 years (along with a lot of forgettable crap) into celebrations of right-wing mores. Here are some of my favorites:
5. "Wouldn’t It Be Nice," by The Beach Boys.
Pro-abstinence and pro-marriage: "Maybe if we think and wish and hope and pray it might come true / Baby then there wouldn’t be a single thing we couldn’t do / We could be married / And then we’d be happy."

8. "Bodies," by The Sex Pistols.
Violent and vulgar, but also a searing anti-abortion anthem by the quintessential punk band: "It’s not an animal / It’s an abortion."

25. "The Battle of Evermore," by Led Zeppelin.
The lyrics are straight out of Robert Plant’s Middle Earth period — there are lines about "ring wraiths" and "magic runes" — but for a song released in 1971, it’s hard to miss the Cold War metaphor: "The tyrant’s face is red."

28. "Janie’s Got a Gun," by Aerosmith.
How the right to bear arms can protect women from sexual predators: "What did her daddy do? / It’s Janie’s last I.O.U. / She had to take him down easy / And put a bullet in his brain / She said ’cause nobody believes me / The man was such a sleaze / He ain’t never gonna be the same."

48. "Why Don’t You Get a Job," by The Offspring.
The lyrics aren’t exactly Shakespearean, but they’re refreshingly blunt and they capture a motive force behind welfare reform.
The Rude Pundit observes:
Because to come up with fifty songs, the readers and editors of the National Review had to neglect, almost entirely, the politics and lifestyles of nearly every single one of the music acts on the list, like, say U2, the Clash, and the Sex Pistols, just for kicks, or noted cross-dressing androgyne David Bowie. They had to twist the meaning of lyrics so that vague references to "freedom" all of a sudden became calls to a modified libertarianism (you know, no taxes, but also no fucking). And, of course, the mention of every fucking song they could find that seems to oppose abortion or alludes to the fall of Communism or doesn't like taxes. This leads them to have to include the Scorpions, Kid Rock, Rush, Creed, After the Fire, Sammy Hagar, and Jesus Jones in a great huge pile of suck.
There are a lot of games to be had with this. Maybe the Top 50 Conservative Moments in Celebrity Nipple Slippage, or Top 50 Most Conservative Moments in Interracial Porn.

But when you have raw material like this, the digs write themselves. The list is perfect comedy as it is. Click through and see what I mean.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Wednesday link-o-rama

  • Somewhere, a bawdy, syphilitic queen is weeping. And the wind cries Mary.
  • Notre Dame fans are illiterate, insecure assholes. [Link corrected. -ed.]
  • Pissed and Petty somehow manages to make poker sound interesting.
  • Gratuitous self-aggrandizement: "CrimeNotes, you are a prophet, my son." (remark addressed to me in the comments on MZone's post about expanding Michigan Stadium)
  • Forget basketball for a second. Who knew that Todd Jones just surpassed Mike Henneman as the Tigers' all-time saves leader? I still have Henneman baseball cards somewhere in my parents' house.
  • Every Day Should Be Saturday captures the essence of Lloyd Carr in a single image.
  • Barely Legal Blog brings back memories of lousy professors who didn't give a shit.
  • Our Baghdad Bureau Chief confirms via e-mail the recent reports that Iraqis love Lionel Richie: "it's totally true — i'm embarrassed to admit that i didn't know that "loving you" song was lionel richie... it's ubiquitous in baghdad..."
  • Requisite serious linkage: there are many interesting articles in the current New York Review of Books.
  • In a hilarious case of mistaken identity, BBC believed that it had booked a technology expert to comment on the British litigation over whether Apple Computer infringed the Beatles' Apple Records trademark. Instead, it booked a cabdriver of the same name. Neither BBC nor their guest realized the mistake until the questioning was underway. The look on the guy's face is priceless ("I'm very surprised to hear this verdict come on me, because I was not expecting that.") but he holds up like a champ.

Monday, May 22, 2006

How do you spell 'relief'? R-O-C-K-N-R-O-L-L

Many things vex me about relief pitching. Why do some teams insist on spending millions on "proven veterans" while others can seemingly get them to propagate like rhizomes in the minors? Why do teams use their best relievers with a three-run lead but not when the score is tied? Why are the Mets cowering from the wrath of Jobu and refusing to put Aaron Heilman in the rotation?

But those questions will be answered at another time. Probably by someone else. I'm here today to address the issue of reliever entrance music. Closers apparently refuse to enter to the sounds of anything that isn't highly commercial, full of detuned guitars and somewhere on the narrow band of the musical spectrum between Metallica and Linkin Park.

The playlist for major league closers makes the music in Duane Reade sound like college radio. This needs to stop. Of course, if I were a major league closer, shit would be all different and stuff.

Here, as promised, is the list of songs I would use as my own, personal entrance music. I'm reasonably sure that none of them overlap with my co-blogger's peerless list of 57 songs worth spending $56.43 on iTunes.
















Now who needs to borrow a feeling, bitch?


I've ordered the songs by how good I'd need to be to get away with such radical choices. For example, a closer like Tyler Walker simply can't enter to anything but generic hard rock. But someone as good as Mariano Rivera (before he started sprouting a tiny growth that looks like one of those two-tined seafood forks), can enter to "Baby Elephant Walk," "Lumberjack Song" or even a spoken-word album by Kirk Van Houten.

  • "Out There" Dinosaur Jr. I love watching the umpires during a pitching change. First he scribbles on his lineup card, then he points out the changes to the official scorer. Then he stands there and signals the number of warmup pitches left, looking bored while music blasts and fans shriek when they show up on the video board. I like to think that the ump would at least enjoy the refreshing change of pace from the usual arena rock. Meanwhile, I'd be ready to uncork my sinker, get a three-pitch save and head out on the town.
  • "Connected" Stereo MCs. Impossible not to get pumped listening to this. Impossible. It blows "The Final Countdown" out of the water. (Unless you're a ... magician!) Of course, the only thing I'd be making disappear would be the heart of the order.
  • "My Iron Lung" Radiohead. Dark and forbidding, intimidating and inspiring at the same time. I imagine gray skies and knee-buckling sliders. If I could have entrance music on the road, this would be it. It's like rock and roll for Jedis who have gone to the dark side. And closers who can throw a non-Euclidean curveball.
  • "Godzilla" Blue Oyster Cult. Dude, if I can reduce Tokyo to rubble and send Mothra to a giant 50-watt in the sky, don't you think I can get a ground ball from pinch-hitter Endy Chavez? Of course I can. I'm a giant lizard with 99-mph gas.

With a purposeful grimace and a terrible sound, he strikes the heart of the Brewers' order down ...

  • The start of the fourth movement in "Symphony No. 9 in E minor" by Antonin Dvorak. No, seriously. Listen. It's badass. Makes Wagner (Richard, not Billy) sound like Paul Simon. No -- Carly Simon. Also, isn't snickering at the pitcher who enters to freaking orchestral arrangements kind of like laughing at a boy named Sue? Why don't you take off that elbow guard and say that to me again?

Sunday, May 21, 2006

A bad decision

Setting: Bar on E. 12th St., 3 a.m., at a birthday party for a friend's acquaintance.

Decision: Use a too-short feather boa as a jump rope.

Context: Everybody was dancing silly and I went for a bold new move.

Result: Stumbling over the feather boa, slamming down to the floor face first, and twisting my ankle.

Crowd reaction: Delight.

Morning aftermath: Ow, ow, ow, my ankle hurts. If I had a girlfriend or mom on the premises, I'd probably be on my way to the doctor's office.

Lesson learned
: No guts, no glory, but personal safety should be your highest priority.

Friday, May 19, 2006

Michigan Stadium's ruin or renaissance

The story is familiar.

A president under the influence of a highly motivated, polarizing advisor adopts an ambitious plan. The plan is cloaked in secrecy, but it turns out to be far more ambitious than what anyone expected. Partisans on one side vocally militate on behalf of the president's ambitious agenda, while a ragtag collection of disorganized hippies circulates self-righteous propaganda in opposition. At a deciding moment, some elected Democrats unsuccessfully vote in opposition, but are left frustrated that they can't thwart the inevitable steamroll.

At least we're not declaring war on Indiana.

In a 5-3 vote, the University of Michigan Board of Regents decided in favor of the Athletic Department's massive $226 million expansion of Michigan Stadium, primarily focused on the construction of 83 luxury boxes.

For those of you who are unfamiliar, Michigan Stadium seats about 107,500 of my best friends. Despite the crowd size, it feels half as big as Yankee Stadium. It's built into the ground, and the vision lines are more panoramic than vertical. As a result, while you may find yourself far from the action, you're not watching from a crow's nest. It's as intimate as any 100,000+ venue can be.

Change is coming.

As described in a Detroit News article:
[Athletic Director Bill] Martin said the project, which will add 83 private suites in towers running along the east and west sides of Michigan Stadium and at about the height of the current scoreboards, will be completed by the 2010 season. The renovations will add to the current 107,501 capacity of Michigan Stadium and put it at more than 108,000.
Detroit Free Press columnist Michael Rosenberg:
[P]eople familiar with U-M's planned proposal paint a picture that is ... well ... really large.

How large? Two structures totaling 425,000 square feet. For a comparison: the Palace, with all its atriums and offices, is 570,000 square feet. U-M's proposal is the equivalent of placing a large dormitory on each side of the stadium.

On the west side (where the press box is located), the luxury boxes would be the equivalent of a six-story building stretching from one end zone to the other. On the east side, they would be the equivalent of an eight-story building stretching from one end zone to the other.

Michigan Regent Laurence Deitch, who was one of the three dissenting votes:

"I am disappointed," Deitch said. "Everybody expressed their thoughts, and we live with the majority rule, and at this point, I await the design, which I think will cause significant consternation, because the public has no idea how massive these additions are. I also wonder whether the project can be delivered within the cost projected."

Since I'm given to kneejerk, occasionally irrational opinions, I'm surprised that I'm still ambivalent about this project. On one side, it's a little like Detroit baseball leaving Tiger Stadium -- sad and inevitable. On the other, the program needs money to thrive, and I don't see luxury boxes as dirtying the program's tradition. Class-based arguments don't fly when season tickets already are distributed in lines similar to Medieval primogeniture laws and cost several hundred bucks to boot. Michigan football is many things, but egalitarian is not one of them.

But the following things make me nervous:

Politics. The University of Michigan is in a scary position. It's a great public university in a state that's rapidly turning into the Mississippi of the Midwest. I don't say that to be snotty about my homestate -- I say it out of pain and love. The Big Three automakers are falling apart and smaller manufacturers have been shutting down since I was in elementary school. The state's budget shrinks, and the University of Michigan takes a hit.

It's been taking hits for a few years. It will keep taking hits regardless.

Still, this kind of aggressive move may be very bad PR. For politicians, the school already is a ripe target. It's the only selective school in the state; it's not exactly humble. Many of its homegrown graduates (myself included) leave the state after graduation and don't look back. Its faculty and graduates are more liberal than the state as a whole. If you're an elected official in the state of Michigan, and you're looking for a soft target to cut costs and take potshots at a liberal elite, the University of Michigan is high on your list.

In an economically troubled, increasingly right-wing state, the liberal flagship university launches a massive $200 million-plus expansion of a sports complex, geared toward catering to the comforts of the richest, most elite portion of an alumni that's already better off than the state as a whole.

Never mind that the funding is doesn't come from public coffers and will be financed entirely by the University. Not everyone understands that. (I'll bet that not everyone at the University understands that.) What outsiders will see is a white elephant at an elitist public school, and they'll resent it.

Get ready for a lot of ignorant talk about how the university doesn't need state funding when it spends $220 million on luxury boxes and raises in-state tuition in the same year.

Maybe I'm wrong, but I don't think Michigan occupies the role in its homestate that Ohio State or Alabama occupy in theirs. There are too many public colleges, and for many of us, Ann Arbor is one step in an exit strategy. Its alumni might move to New York or Chicago and donate to the school, but they don't become the state's governors and senators. In terms of athletics, Michigan State's blue-collar, underdog status gets it a lot of affection.

And at heart, Michigan doesn't exactly think of itself as a public school. Too many of its students come from out of state. Its competition for students and professors are Chicago and Cornell and Northwestern, not Michigan State and Wayne State.

All of which is fine, and better than the alternative. And to reiterate, what I'm worrying about isn't right versus wrong as much as what governs perception.

And I worry that the rest of the state will see this and recoil, in ways that have implications beyond what happens on Saturday.

***

Aesthetics: There's a 50-50 chance that this behemoth construction project will end up looking like dump. Familiar with the campus's tradition of architectual confusion, the MZone offers its rendition of the likely result:


Looks about right to me.

***

Secrecy: Personally, my biggest criticism is how this has unfolded behind closed doors. If -- as some people optimistically believe -- the final plans aren't as ambitious as we've been told, Bill Martin would do well to show them to the general public. I think he's a competent athletic director and businessman, but politically he's tone deaf, as last fall's SBC sponsorship fiasco illustrated. Mary Sue Coleman doesn't have deep ties to Michigan. I have no reason to question her judgment, but I still wonder if she knows what she's messing with.

Ultimately, there will be plans and announcements, and token input from the public. In the interim, when most of the information and analysis comes from partisans on either side, the only thing to do is hold your breath.

This is fine for now. No need for any premature announcements. But after today's 5-3 vote, Martin needs to go on a PR offensive. The plans as they currently stand should go public, as well as all of the finances.

My hunch is that there would be less skepticism if they'd been more direct in explaining the process. Keeping it a secret makes people suspect the worst.

***

Ambition: This is a big-time, bet-your-future gamble, and I'm still not sure why Martin and Coleman are making it. A divided vote by the Board of Regents is as rare as Lloyd going for first down on 4th and 1 at the 30.

Things at that university have a tendency to spin out of control, and its football program is the situs for a lot of irrational passion. One of the dirty open secrets about the University is its governance by a board elected statewide. Some of these members fancy themselves as politicians. A divided Board of Regents was ultimately President Duderstadt's undoing, and by not assembling a plan that could garner a unanimous vote, Martin and Coleman have put a lot at risk. My guess is that Coleman cares about this one-tenth as much as she cares about the Life Sciences Institute, and isn't prepared for the whirlwind that could come out of this.

For what? The added revenues would be welcome, not make-or-break. It would, in the alternative, be break if this plan misfires, either by going overbudget or not meeting Martin's projected revenues.

It makes me think a little of Robert Moses. I hope it turns out to be the good Robert Moses, not the bad Robert Moses.

57 songs worth spending $56.43 on iTunes

This list is arbitrary. They're not my 57 favorite songs, and they're not 57 songs that you've never heard of. Most of them fit into three categories: overlooked songs by major artists; slightly obscure songs by current, moderately popular artists; and music from our parents' generation that you don't hear very often. They're mostly loveable, not very complicated, and worth blasting in your car or your headphones, whatever the case may be.

This is installment 10 of my 57 lists of 57 things.
  1. Brendan Benson, Spit It Out
  2. The Black Keys, She Said, She Said
  3. Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Promise
  4. Brian Jonestown Massacre, Straight Up and Down
  5. Eric Burdon, San Franciscan Nights
  6. Clarence Carter, Soul Deep
  7. Leonard Cohen, The Future
  8. Dandy Warhols, Solid
  9. Dandy Warhols, The Last High
  10. Dandy Warhols, Not if You Were the Last Junkie on Earth
  11. Deep Purple, Hush
  12. Detroit Cobras, Just Can't Please You
  13. Donovan, Atlantis
  14. Donovan, Sunshine Superman
  15. Bob Dylan, The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carrol (From Vol. 5 of the Bootleg Series)
  16. Edison Lighthouse, Love Grows (Where My Rosemary Goes)
  17. Tim Fite, No Good Here
  18. The Guess Who, No Sugar Tonight
  19. The Hold Steady, Knuckles
  20. The Hold Steady, Stevie Nix
  21. The Hold Steady, How a Ressurection Really Feels
  22. Joe Tex, S.Y.S.L.J.F.M .
  23. Loving Spoonful, Bald Headed Lena
  24. Magnolia Electric Company, The Dark Don't Hide It
  25. Maktub, Say What You Mean
  26. Stephen Malkmus, Loud Proud Cloud
  27. Stephen Malkmus, Baby Come On
  28. Mamas & The Papas, Twelve Thirty
  29. Manfred Mann, The Mighty Quinn
  30. Marah, Walt Whitman Bridge
  31. Neutral Milk Hotel, Holland 1945
  32. New Pornographers, Graceland
  33. A.C. Newman, Homemade Bombs in the Afternoon
  34. Nic Armstrong & The Thieves, I Can't Stand It
  35. Old 97's, Won't Be Home
  36. Old 97's, Murder (Or a Heart Attack)
  37. The Polyphonic Spree, A Long Day Continues/We Sound Amazed
  38. Lou Reed, Street Hassle
  39. The Rolling Stones, Mercy Mercy
  40. The Rolling Stones, Good Times
  41. The Rolling Stones, Sister Morphine
  42. rx, Dick is a Killer*
  43. Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels, Sock it to Me, Baby
  44. Screaming Trees, Nearly Lost You
  45. William Shatner, Common People
  46. Silver Jews, How Can I Love You If You Won't Lie Down
  47. Nina Simone, To Love Somebody
  48. The Streets, Fit But You Know It
  49. The Streets, Empty Cans
  50. Supergrass, Caught by the Fuzz
  51. Supergrass, La Song
  52. Wings, Band on the Run
  53. Neil Young, I Am the Ocean
  54. Neil Young, Falling From Above
  55. Neil Young, Revolution Blues
  56. Neil Young, Walk On
  57. Warren Zevon, Mohammed's Radio
*Click through the link for free rx downloads.

Thursday, May 18, 2006

Yo

Flop's been spending the week hanging out with his mom.

I've been drafting some posts, but nothing that's ready to publish yet. (Shocking that my posts aren't just extemporaneous rambles, I know.) I'm also contemplating a bizarre blog side-project, which you'll probably never hear about again.

We've been quiet since Monday, but considering the recent outburst of activity, I hope that's forgiven.

In other news, two of our friends just had a baby, expanding the future Cole Slaw Blog readership by one. Baby's First Cabbage Shredder is already in the mail.

More soon.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Dear Network Executives,

I've had enough of your good shows.

It used to be that the only TV I watched came in the form of shitty reality shows that I loved and loathed in secret.

Your highlights used to be Temptation Island ...


... and Paradise Hotel ...


... Joe Millionaire ...


... and retardfests like Big Brother.


HBO was already airing The Sopranos.


There was one good show per week, 13 weeks a year, and the rest was brain candy. I could flip on Temptation Island and promptly tune out.

There was no way of knowing that The Sopranos would beget Six Feet Under in 2001...


... thus raising the grand total of good TV shows to two. But Six Feet Under begat Carnivale ...


... which begat Deadwood ...


... all shows that collectively effed up a year's worth of Sunday nights.

This was all manageable until 24 became channeled Jerry Bruckheimer and Oliver Stone, then became the unofficial survival guide to our long national nightmare ...


... and around that time, ABC unleashed the most challenging network drama since Twin Peaks.


Mondays and Wednesdays were out.

Reality TV classed up. I fell for The Amazing Race ...


... and still become addicted two episodes into every season of Survivor.


But as long as your networks were still airing total fucking horseshit ...

... I was immune to comedy.

Then came the Bluths ...


... and the funny (if neutered) American update of The Office ...

.... when ABC got on the bandwagon with a great little show called Sons and Daughters.

Tivo was only taking me so far. I'm not going to spend the whole weekend watching recordings of your programs. Now, almost every night includes your goddamn "appointment television."

Besides, Tivo has responsibilities on basic cable. It has to keep track of these guys ...


... and this guy ...


... and goddammit, now this guy.


According to an article in today's Times, NBC is going to actually air some interesting programs:
"Kidnapped" will follow the complicated plot behind the kidnapping of the teenage son of a wealthy New York couple, played by Timothy Hutton and Dana Delany. "Heroes" will emulate the ABC hit "Lost," adding a few science-fiction touches. A group of young people discover they have sudden, unusual powers — an office worker can teleport at will to any location; a cop can hear other people's thoughts — just as a menacing force seems to be threatening the world.
I didn't ask for this. I was happy with a bunch of drunken boob-and-thong Frenching contests, which I could watch with half an eye but otherwise ignore. Now, instead of reading fancy books and writing the great American novel, I'm coming home to watch your frickin' shows and hanging on every word. No one asked for a golden age of television or wanted your multinational asses to decide that it was time for the broadcast equivalent of Renaissance Florence.

I've stayed away from American Idol, Hoss. None of those medical dramas for me. I'm trying, Ringo. I'm trying real hard, but you're not making it easy.

Very truly yours,

CrimeNotes

Monday, May 15, 2006

Bush keeps his retardation in check

I doubt that President Bush's new immigration policy will do much practical good, and that tonight's speech was anything more than an empty attempt to show leadership on a hot-button issue. The result of this ginned-up controversy will likely be a Mexican Hugo Chavez and a sense of empowerment among white supremacists.

Nonetheless, he gets credit for the tone of his speech. It would have been easy to demogogue this issue and use coded terminology to feed the xenophobic, racist undertones of the anti-immigrant movement. Thankfully and surprisingly, the tone of his remarks was actually humane and measured. He spent more time speaking favorably of the immigrant experience than he did outlining the alleged problems that immigration causes.

Maybe this is just giving credit to a dog that can't be housebroken for not pissing the as-yet-unwhizzed-upon rug, but for 17 minutes, he didn't totally suck.

What I've been up to: Yes, a post that's all about me

So you've noticed we've turned into the Cole Slaw Review of Books and Popular Culture while my computer's been at death's door. It's been very highfalutin': A discussion of Great American novels, a sterling review of Neil Young's latest and insight into Myspace.

It's like when Sideshow Bob turned the Krusty the Klown Show into Sidehow Bob's Cavalcade of Whimsy. Except we'll be keeping our slide whistles, thank you.

To cut through the heaviness of my co-blogger's intellectually stimulating commentary, let me provide you with some of the stupid shit I've been up to lately. I falute at a lower level, and I'm not ashamed to admit it.

Since last posting, I've done the following things:
  • Watched Game 2 of the Cavs-Pistons series with two Pistons fans, one of them my co-blogger. The other, a hard-hittin' reader of the blog. Despite the Cavs' incompetence in that game, it was a good time. I need to get out more on weeknights.
  • Purchased some of the random, pint-sized bottles of Polish and Czech beer that go for $1-$2 at my local bodegas. I enjoyed the Polish brand called Brok the most. Mmm, Brok.
  • Knocked my Brok off of my coffee table and caught it mid-fall, which had roughly the same effect as if I had picked the bottle off the table and shaken it at the TV several times, as if performing a cleansing ritual or celebrating a pennant. Note: I was actually watching TV, not playing video game football, when it would have at least been potentially appropriate. That was a a fun mess to clean up. But at least I got to finish my Brok!
  • Trekked to Brooklyn to borrow goalie equipment (I'm our emergency goalie; this week was an emergency-goalie situation), then dragged said equipment to meet a friend for dinner. I was 45 minutes late, which I almost never am. She forgave me anyway, although the cafe we met at was amused to see me put a goalie stick in the hatrack where they kept umbrellas.
  • Made like a bajillion saves in my game, including a clean glove save on a breakaway that I'll be boring my grandchildren with the way I'm boring you here. Incidentally, we tied.
  • Purchased a Lonely Planet guidebook to Budapest. Just 'cause.
  • Was informed by an otherwise smart and personable Notre Dame fan that Michigan has "no chance" at winning in South Bend this September. It's nice that Irish fans are totally not believing their own hype. Notre Dame may well be good this season, but even so, they'll still have one of the most overinflated ratios of praise to performance of any team. How long until the season starts?
  • Pulled off a classic win-win blockbuster trade in my fantasy league, sending Vlad Guerrero for ... oh, my God, this is why I usually keep my personal life out of the blog _ it's very mundane.
Coming up soon ... my list of Top 10 Songs I Would Totally Use As Entrance Music if I Were a Closer, ranked by how good I would actually need to be to be able to pull it off. (For example: If I wanted to trot to the mound while "Rock and Roll (Ain't Noise Pollution)" by AC/DC played, I would only need to be as good as, say, the incomparable Travis Harper of the Tampa Bay Devil Fishies. But to enter to something more offbeat, like, say the theme from "The Jeffersons" I'd need to be a cut above. say, K-Rod at the least.

More on this soon ...

Good artists misfire: new releases by The Streets and Philip Roth

I'm a sucker for albums that tell a story. The genre doesn't matter much. I have favorites like The Hold Steady's Separation Sunday and Neil Young's Greendale, but also appreciated Sufjan Stevens's Illinois, some of The Decemberists' releases (short story collections more than story albums) and swooned for a great release from May 2004, A Grand Don't Come for Free by The Streets.

That last album followed a day in the life of a working-class English guy who loses a chunk of cash. Attempting to figure out what happened to the money, the album is a witty and observant story about the day that followed, including some moving tracks about his friendships and romances. He thinks a friend might have swiped the money, and he yearns for a girl to replace a love affair that ended. The album's songs are sharp and surprising, each of them a stitch of life recounted in a working-class English idiom. It was a rewarding piece of work and one that pays off a careful listening the twentieth time around.

It's two years after A Grand Don't Come for Free, and The Streets returns with a very different Mike Skinner. The Hardest Way to Make An Easy Living is not an album that will grow on me. It may be one of the worst albums I own -- and I still have Big Willie Style as a reminder that bad purchases have consequences.

The biggest problem with The Hardest Way to Make An Easy Living isn't that Skinner opted to focus the album on the pratfalls and frustrations of fame; in theory, he's talented enough to pull of that conceit. It's that Skinner seems to have become humorless, and lost touch with the heart and emotion that made A Grand Don't Come for Free so satisfying. The new release is witless, whiny, and slow, so the narcissistic bitching about fame quickly wears thin. A song called "Two Nations" starts off as a successful enough take on the difference between Americans and Britons, then veers into this rambling:
Understated is how we prefer to be
That's why I've sold three million and you've never heard of me
The paparazzi shoot me the the girls all loot on me
But don't shoot hiders, we fight football rivalries
The work wack means to con back home
And I wrote the ten wack commandments on my own
Not funny, not fun, and pretty smug talk from a guy who once wanted nothing more than someone to rely on and talk to all night.

None of the music is memorable, and some of the tracks (particularly a piece called "Memento Mori") are unlistenable.

Mike Skinner is adrift, and it's a voice I miss.

* * *

Philip Roth's new book Everyman isn't a failure on par with the new Streets release. It's just a yawner that retraces themes that he exhausted in The Dying Animal, Patrimony, Sabbath's Theater and My Life As a Man.

Roth's recent political novels were an amazing renaissance. After spending much of his career occupied with the intimate details of sex and death, he tore off the doors by dropping those issues into aggressively political arguments. His whole body of work took a new power.

Here, he goes back to old form without any new insight. Everyman is well written and believable, but there's nothing to see here. It's a short chronicle of the life of an unnamed narrator. He is not an interesting person. Never mind that it contains some passages so over-the-top that they read like Roth parody:
For the first two days he was always diddling around her ass with his fingers while she went down on him, until finally she looked up and said, "If you like that little hole, why don't you use it?"
Yep.

Someday, an earnest Ph.D candidate will write a dissertation on Philip Roth's views on anal sex. He's invented a world of assfucking. This passage will not be a highlight.

For all of its graphic content (not just sex, but surgeries, hernias, heart attacks, and appendicitis) the book is a boring and uninspired little story that tells us 1.) dying sucks, 2.) getting sick sucks, 3.) and people don't like it when you're mean to them.

Sunday, May 14, 2006

MySpace.com and the end of privacy

Last weekend I was reading in a coffeehouse when I faced one of my least-favorite social moments, seated next to two people having a personal conversation that I did not want to hear.

These were two seemingly educated, shabby-chic adults in their early thirties, discussing their journalism careers and job searches. The subject turned to a tragedy that affected their mutual friend. They discussed the delicate etiquette of wanting to be there for a friend but not press hard on an awkward personal matter.

"You should leave her a message on MySpace, just saying that you're there for her in case she needs anything," one suggested to the other.

Far be it from me to second-guess anyone else's choice of how to communicate with a friend. That's not the issue here. MySpace -- just another brick in Rupert Murdoch's media hegemony -- has 75 million members, according to a recent New Yorker article.

If we believe last week's Washington Post poll showing that 63 percent of the public approves of the NSA's blanket monitoring of every phone call made inside the United States, imagine what the number will be in 20 years. MySpace is a corporate vehicle that feeds on commercial trends and user validation. It's benign enough in isolation to post a list of favorite bands, TV shows, liquors and sex acts. But when these harmless exercises of self-expression and ego-gratification are part of a 75 million-person database at Rupert Murdoch's fingertips, MySpace is not a social networking tool, but the world's most valuable market research study.

You think you're signing up for a site to keep up with your friends and your favorite bands. (I signed up a few weeks ago when I found out that The Hold Steady keeps a MySpace page, so call me a hypocrite.) That may be what you have in mind, but that's not what the site's gatekeepers care about.

Once you get used to exposing yourself online, it's a short leap to conceding other aspects of your privacy, because shit, if your MySpace profile exalts Cuervo Gold, fingerbanging and "My Humps," you're less likely to care whether the NSA tracks calls to your sister or your girlfriend.

John Cassidy's article in last week's New Yorker is a little chilling if you're tuned to the NSA's data-mining escapades. (Unfortunately, the article is not posted online.) According to the article, Facebook.com -- a second-generation MySpace that targets college kids -- has become ubiquitous at elite universities. I've heard of the site, but didn't realize how pervasive it is.

I'm 29, but I feel like the gap between me and the personal networking phenomonen is three generations.

Here's where we will be in thirty years: a consumer class comprised of tens of millions of technology-savvy, educated purchasers have volunteered to join an online Camp X-Ray. They're at ease with telling corporations everything, and given the blurring line between corporations and federal law enforcement, there will be few remaining privacy limits that people care about.

It will seem quaint that anyone objected when the government tapped their phones or logged their calls. When you're at ease using Rupert Murdoch's platform to acknowledge a friend's personal tragedy, you've given up a lot.

Friday, May 12, 2006

One of the best blog posts I've ever read

At a site called Pissed and Petty, blogger Ryan begins his story as follows:
A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The 4 Train.

I had just gotten off work and was walking up Broadway to catch the subway home when I realized I didn’t have any cigarettes. I stopped at a newsstand to see if they had any rolling papers. I roll my own cigarettes now because, here in NYC, cigarettes cost damn near $8.00 a pack, and you can’t even smoke them in bars but that’s another story entirely.

As I’m standing at the newsstand trying to determine if they sell what I’m looking for, a rock star looking guy walks up beside me and asks the nice Indian man behind the counter,

“Hey bro, you got any magazines that tell me where I can find a good rock’n’roll show tonight?”
What follows is an encounter with a cigarette-generous stranger, which then leads to an invitation for a beer. And from there Ryan tells a tale that unfolds like the lighter side of Hubert Selby Jr.

Generally speaking, I have no tolerance for sites or posts about somebody's boring misadventures or mundane personal life. But this is not one of those posts.

The American fiction of the last 25 years

The New York Times just published the results of one of those nerdy-but-interesting book polls to name the best American novel of the past 25 years. The interesting (and respectable) results: Toni Morrison's Beloved received the most votes, followed by Don DeLillo's Underworld, Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian, John Updike's four Rabbit books, and Philip Roth's American Pastoral.

The article lists seventeen other works that received significant votes from the large and impressive voting pool. These include five other Roth novels (The Counterlife, Operation Shylock, Sabbath's Theater, The Human Stain and The Plot Against America) DeLillo's Libra and White Noise, and A Confederacy of Dunces. It also included some personal favorites that I wouldn't have expected to see on such a list, like Richard Ford's Independence Day, and Raymond Carver's collection Where I'm Calling From.

Another pleasant surprise -- the list is full of household names and books with relatively broad appeal. If you're moderately tuned into contemporary American novelists, you'll recognize most of the list. Apparently, the voters didn't feel a need to one-up each other by being edgy or contrarian. It's of course possible that 100 years from now there will be universal recognition that the best book of 1980-2006 is a work we're not thinking about today, but the Times list is solid and respectable, surprisingly devoid of shock value or controversy.

I love these kinds of lists, not because think they prove anything, but because they invite me to write my own list, and to compare and contrast. They also serve as a great suggested reading list -- I never would have picked up Anthony Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time if it hadn't been for the Modern Library poll a few years ago. Among other things, today's list makes me think that I should re-read Beloved.

Here's what my Top 5 would look like: I'd place American Pastoral at number one. It was a tense, well-told story, but also a micro-history of America after World War II, convincing and powerful and gimmick-free. I have a rough time paring down the other four, but if I throw self-consciousness, trendiness and political correctness aside, it would include Philip Roth's The Counterlife, DeLillo's White Noise, Tom Wolfe's The Bonfire of the Vanities , and Russell Banks's Cloudsplitter. Not the most cutting-edge list, and not many people would put Bonfire in this category, but it's still a book I read and re-read and find hilarious and joyful and exciting every time. White Noise gets written off as too self-consciously post-modern and anti-commercial, but I think it remains DeLillo's most interesting (and accessible) work, much better than the bloated and pretentious Underworld. I find DeLillo's body of work inconsistent and hit-and-miss, with White Noise his most successful book. The Counterlife's difficult narrative and self-contradictory depictions of Israel are challenging, but I also think it's a sort of condensed summary of Philip Roth's other books and intensifies the themes in his Zuckerman trilogy. Cloudsplitter, after American Pastoral , may be my favorite of the past 25 years -- a long and wild book about abolitionist John Brown, the raid on Harper's Ferry, and the Bleeding Kansas fiasco, totally persuasive in appropriating the language and morays of the mid-19th Century, and a chilling story to boot.

My other contenders mimic the Times list so closely it's almost not worth mentioning. I'd include all of that list's Roth entries, A Confederacy of Dunces, Carver's What We Talk About When We Talk About Love, Independence Day, and two more recent favorites, Jonathan Lethem's Fortress of Solitude and Colson Whitehead's John Henry Days. Blood Meridian is a great piece of work too.

What books in the past 25 years were the most fun? I'd name Theodore Roszak's Flicker, Donna Tartt's The Secret History, and Stephen King's The Stand.

* * *

In other book news, Indonesian writer Pramoedya Ananta Toer recently died. I once saw him do a reading in Ann Arbor, and remember it more clearly than any author reading I've attended. He spent most of his life as a political prisoner, and by the time he was released and traveling to America, he was elderly, charming, and morally serious. He never made a major splash in the U.S., but was frequently mentioned as a possible Nobel Prize winner.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

2006

Your every phone call is being secretly logged and stored by an ultra-clandestine arm of the federal government. As part of a government partnership with billion-dollar global telecom companies, the federal government has paid large undisclosed sums in compensation for their work in the program. The billions of calls made by every American -- the contents ranging from highly confidential business discussions to news about a family death -- take their place in a massive repository of information. No one is supposed to know that this database exists, and it will comprise the largest database of any kind in the history of the world. The records will be maintained in perpetuity. One of the major telecoms refuses to go along with the arrangement, is threatened by the federal government with the loss of government contracts, and told that their refusal places national security in jeopardy.

While other businesses who don't support the president are bullied and excluded from receiving public contracts, a collection of child refugees from a catastrophic natural disaster attend a function at the White House, held to celebrate the highest holy day of your nation's predominant religion. Once there, the child refugees sing the praises of the head of state and members of his political party, celebrating the opportunity to join him hand in hand. The child refugees do not know that approximately two hundred members of the government have been accused with acts of theft and other types of fraud in relation to the federal government's efforts to rebuild their now-destroyed homes. Many of these crimes arose when government employees solicited bribes from contractors sympathetic to the dominant party.

To go home tonight, you walk to a Chambers Street subway station, knowing that your movements are recorded by government security cameras at all turns. You're carrying with you a knapsack containing your sweaty gym clothes. Met at the subway entrance by four polite and professional law enforcement officers, you have no choice but to submit to the search. Maybe you're an attractive 25-year-old-girl, and you notice one of the officers smirk as he inspects your belongings. You feel demeaned, but practically speaking, you're not going to make a spectacle of yourself by refusing, walk two blocks to another entrance, and miss the next train.

You return home that night and call your sister to wish her a happy birthday, using your carrier, Verizon. You have no way of knowing that your call instantly, secretly, and efficiently was placed into a database with the hundreds of millions of other calls placed that day.

Still, you're luckier than others. You haven't been forbidden from air travel and denied an explanation as to why, after writing a book that criticized the head of state. Or you're not Donnie Darko director Richard Kelly, who finds himself on a watch list and thinks that it's because his next movie negatively depicts the current political climate. Homeland Security hasn't seized your computer server for unexplained reasons. You've never been arrested and monitored for encouraging people to eat vegetables instead of ham. Cops didn't cause any nerve damage after they arrested you for acting as legal monitor to a group of protesters.

You did, however, attend a protest against the Iraq War in 2003. You read about California's head of anti-terrorism, who said, "You can make an easy kind of a link that, if you have a protest group protesting a war where the cause that's being fought against is international terrorism, you might have terrorism at that protest. You can almost argue that a protest against [the war] is a terrorist act."

So yes, it could be worse. You could have to live in California, where the state would label you a terrorist.

Fake football and fake TV

Two great tastes that may or may not taste great together ...

In fake football news, I am in my third season as the coach of Tulane. The Green Wave have churned out 13 wins, 4,000 yards and a Heisman winner in each of my first two seasons. I'm only a couple games into season three, but thanks to a running back who transferred from Alabama after season No. 1, things are looking good for three-peats on all accounts.

It's just my small contribution to a hurricane-ravaged citizenry.

Of much greater importance is fake television. With Tuesday night's episode of Scrubs such a disappointment, I feel as if I need more fake TV, too. This is where Official Friend of Cole Slaw Blog Dr. Zenith comes in.

His blog has been on our list, under the coveted "Silliness" rubric, for a long time now. But we've never actively urged you to go there until now. It's a listing of (lamentably) lost episodes of television shows. The sort of stuff you wish you could read when you hit the "INFO" button on your remote.

Dr. Zenith would be the ideal tour guide to some tipsy late-night channel surfing. His listings include an epiosde of "227" involving hard lessons about Sandra and venereal disease, a showing of "Small Wonder" in which Vicki gets her batteries jacked so the Lawson kids can play Lazer Tag and a "Mama's Family" that includes the Devil and Mama herself doing pitched battle, and if you think Mama can't handle Satan himself, well, you clearly haven't been paying attention.

There's also multiple entries for "Perfect Strangers" and "Beverly Hills, 90210," and at least one for "Coach" (by mentioning that show, I have now tied this post together like an as-yet-unwhizzed-upon rug).

And if this weren't enough to encourage some procrastination right now, Dr. Zenith is coming up on his one-year blogiversary. Go. Read. Laugh.

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

When it comes to soccer, I am an Iranian mullah

My least-favorite quadrennial sports spectacle involves an activity that makes rhythmic gymnastics and synchronized swimming look exciting by comparison.

I speak of the World Cup, an event that drives some of my friends to think of themselves as enlightened internationalists, don skirts, and claim interest in a sport that they never once mentioned in the preceding 47 months. This time around, the Fancy Lads' Spectator Bowling League is sending my co-blogger abroad, while another friend sashays to Old Europe because he thinks he likes soccer.

I'm hanging back with Mohammad Ali-Abadi. Ali-Abadi, head of Iran's Vice President for Physical Education, summed up my feelings quite nicely:
"I will ban athletes with an effeminate look ... It is really disgraceful for Iran that young people step onto fields wearing make-up. When a man enters the field with dyed hair and groomed eyebrows he is disrespecting society."
Amen to that, my brother.

I've watched little soccer, but I've seen enough to notice all of the haircuts and grooming that it requires.

Iran, you and I have more in common than I thought. We can all sit back and rip on A.J. Hawk, but at the end of the day, I want athletes to be unkempt and ugly. Sports should not incorporate glamour on the playing field. Soccer is about neat haircuts and preening, with some prissy, new-millenium European nationalism thrown in as seasoning. This is evidenced, among other things, by all the singing that goes on in the stands.

President Bush's waffling on this issue should make us all concerned. In his celebrated interview with Bild am Sonntag (the one where he lied about catching the biggest perch in world history) Bush simply does not go far enough toward labeling soccer un-American:
"When I was young, I did not see a single soccer match. Where I came from, [soccer] wasn't played," Bush said. "The sport simply did not exist. Therefore there is a whole generation of Americans who are not really [soccer] fans.

"However there is a new generation of Americans who have grown up with soccer. For them, the World Cup is of great interest and it's the most important sporting event in the world.

"And some of us, the old guys, are beginning to understand how important the World Cup is for the entire world."

I had to correct this article. The bracketed use of "soccer" replaces the word "football." I'd like to attribute this to screw-ups in English-German translation, but because Bush also used the word "soccer," I'm concerned that he might have called the sport football. If that happened, it strengthens my conviction that he must be impeached.

Also -- there are Americans who think that the World Cup is "the most important sporting event in the world"? Those born abroad, perhaps, and one of the fun things about living in New York is being around people who actually were born abroad, and thus properly give a shit. This is their sport. There may be a scattered native-born American who, by accident of geography or socialization, legitimately believes that she likes soccer. I don't know who such a person might be, but she could be out there.

We have three national pastimes -- football, baseball, and basketball. Hockey is a regional sport beloved by Canadians and Americans who live in the northern climes.

We have ice skating for the ladies. We have tennis and golf for the rich people. Their rich kids learn how to play lacrosse, a sport adapted from the Native Americans. These rich kids go to fancy rich-kid colleges, where they behave badly.

That's all we have, and we don't need any more. We have a system in place, and an entire world of beer commercials to sustain it.

The rest of the world can enjoy soccer without us. We don't need to fuck it up for them, and they don't need to give us another reason to behave like spazzes and assholes.

Stop pandering, President Bush!

There is no room for another sport. Stop encouraging it! Your instincts are right -- generations of Americans aren't soccer fans, because soccer is un-American. Iran understands this, and is doing its best to keep the grooming under control.

President Bush claims that he doesn't like soccer, but his attitude goes a long way toward empowering those who like their sport to come with hair gel and lots of aimless running. Sounds like the makings of a negative campaign ad.

Final score: Iran 2, Bush 1.


I originally found the quotes from Ali-Abadi and Bush over at Fanopticon, which, like my friends, is trying to stay amused before football season starts.

Monday, May 08, 2006

Neil Young starts all over again

Well, all those people, they think they got it made
But I wouldn't buy, sell, borrow or trade
Anything I have to be like one of them.
I'd rather start all over again.

Neil Young, "Motion Pictures," from On the Beach

To find a little perspective on Neil Young's Living With War, consider that arguably the darkest album in the history of pop music is his 1974 release On the Beach.

Backed by Rick Danko and Levon Helm, Neil let loose a bruised-up vision of distintegration and personal apocalypses. The album is a lush, paradoxically trippy rebuke of hippie excess. A couple of years earlier, in "Needle and the Damage Done," Neil was the first major rock figure to warn against the wages of drug use, and by the time On the Beach was recorded, his friend and roadie Bruce Berry had died of a heroin overdose. Berry's death had already become the subject of the then-unreleased song "Tonight's the Night," and when he recorded On the Beach, Neil was in a bleak mood.

In songs like "Revolution Blues" (about a Charles Manson-like cult leader, with lyrics like "I've got the Revolution Blues/ I see bloody fountains/ 10,000 dune buggies coming down the mountain/ I hear that Laurel Canyon is full of famous stars/ but I hate them worse than lepers/ and kill them in their cars"), "Ambulance Blues" (a bitter remembrance of "the old folky days," described as Neil's "Desolation Row") and "Motion Pictures" (a kiss-off to actress and ex-girlfriend Carrie Snodgrass), Neil renounces the California scene that made him, then nearly broke him.

He is, after all, the only celebrity that Charles Manson spoke kindly about. Neil once gave him a motorcycle.

Neil then released another dark masterpiece, Tonight's the Night, followed by the extraordinary Rust Never Sleeps. Thereafter came his artistic confusion of the '80s, memorable mostly for the anti-commercial anthem "This Note's For You" and a love-affair with the synthesizer.

Like Dylan when he went electric and then found Jesus, Neil has frequently, aggressively, pugnaciously reinvented himself. He fights with his music and with his fans. An album of acoustic love ballads is followed by an album of guitar anthems. He writes "Ohio," and the next decade speaks favorably of Reagan.

"On the Beach" looked back on the "old folky ways" of CSNY, and they turned out to be "pissin' in the wind."

Artistic merits aside, Living With War is an album about Neil Young roaring back. Living With War is the reversal of On the Beach -- as triumphant as On the Beach was dark, as idealistic as On the Beach was cynical. It's not a mournful, earnest protest album. It's a protest album disguised as party rock. It punches walls, spins around, breaks some glasses, and pours another. If Neil's fall release Prairie Wind had the tones of an aging legend singing out a valedictory, Living With War is a wolf whistle from an angry artist who will not go gently into that good night.

The first song is called "After the Garden." CSNY's song "Woodstock" memorably included the line, "we've got to get ourselves back to the garden." "After the Garden" attacks the idea that there needs to be a strongman to run the government, and repeatedly asks the question about what happens "after the garden is gone." This is Neil picking up on a CSNY lyric -- the garden being an unattainable ideal that animated the movements of the 60s, but trailed off. The song isn't so much idealizing the peace movement of the 60s so much as wondering what happened to the people who let it die. It's not accusatory -- Neil would have to include himself in that category. And it's not maudlin. The song rocks. It opens with big guitar riffs, and if there's an underlying tone to the lyrics, it's the idea that the bad times are going to pass.

The whole album is like that. Even when Neil is singing about dark subjects, it's not the mournful sounds of Dylan's "Masters of War" or "A Hard Rain's Gonna Fall," or even Neil's "Ohio." It's confident and assertive. Neil isn't asking for anything or pleading for change -- he's here to tell people how it is, and if you're not getting it, go someplace else. He's more of a defiant teenager than he was when he wrote "Sugar Mountain."

The second song, "Living With War," may be the weakest track on the album. It's not a bad piece of work, but it's a little inward-looking (with lyrics like "I'm living with war every day/ I'm living with war in my heart every day.") and the one song on the album where his 100-person choir softens the sound rather than intensifies it. Song number three, "The Restless Consumer," starts with a rumbling guitar dirge that could come from Rust Never Sleeps. It's the most pissed-off song on the album, linking Madison Avenue to the marketing of a war, cut up with the refrain, "don't need no more lies." It then jumps into a Jeffrey Sachs-like riff on famine and poverty. Even though Pearl Jam and grunge rock grew directly out of Neil's work, this song brings Pearl Jam's Ten to mind.

The fourth track, "Shock and Awe," is Neil's most direct attack on President Bush. The "Mission Accomplished" speech is juxtaposed with "thousands of bodies in the ground." Starting the song by alluding to the promise of liberation, it's a litany about the death and destruction that followed.

A song called "Families" breaks up the anger. There's a slight Bruce Springsteen sound to it. There's a triumphant, joyful sound. The song is, I think, the thoughts of a soldier, looking back with a combination of pride and euphoria on everything that waits for him when he gets back home. A song like this breaks up any charge that Neil is an America-hater, or the album a cynical exercise. On any other album, this could be seen as a piece of a pep rally. Coming in the middle of Neil's hard-earned outrage, though, the song is more poignant. When Neil hits the triumphant closing lines -- "I can't wait to see you again in the USA" -- I got a swell-in-the-throat feeling, not being able to wait for things getting back to normal, the way I felt when I finished Philip Roth's The Plot Against America.

The next song, "Flags of Freedom," hits similar notes. Think John Mellencamp's "Pink Houses" with a topical edge: "Flags that line old Main Street/ Are blowin' in the wind/ these must be the flags of freedom flying." The family's youngest son goes off to war while his sister listens to Bob Dylan and "sees the President speaking on a flat-screen TV in the window of the old appliance store," while her brother walks past. It's a slice of life, relatively apolitical, as allusive as a Raymond Carver short story.

Then comes "Impeach the President." This is the song I feared. There's nothing worse than an earnest artist taking on a grand subject and failing. Good news and hallelujah -- this song is a rock spectacle, Neil's catchiest and most memorable since "Rockin' in the Free World," less of a visceral indictment than "Shock and Awe," more of a cat-call and mockery of the president. After laying out his affirmative case -- including wiretapping, Hurricane Katrina, and a secrecy fetish -- the song jumps into an incredibly catchy chant of "flip flop," backed by recordings of the president's own words. The song's tune is catchy as hell, and the lyrics are packed with effective imagery. You hear this song, and the past five years run before your eyes in all of their misery, but with a strangely comical tone. It's angry, yes, but also oddly sentimental, and slightly hilarious. Not that the song is funny, but hearing Bush's own words accompanied by the "flip flop" chant balms some of the memories from 2004.

"Lookin' For a Leader" is a non-partisan plea for someone to come forward "to bring our country home" and "reunite the red white and blue." He singles out Barack Obama and Colin Powell as our best hopes, noting that whoever the ideal leader is, "he's walking here among us and we've got to seek him out." It's not a bad song, but it's not one of the album's most memorable. Its lyrics function as a worthy postscript to "Impeach the President."

The next song, "Roger and Out," is the song that triggered my earlier comparisons to On the Beach. It's not one of the album's signature pieces, but I think it's the key to decoding Living With War to Neil's other work. It starts with the lyrics, "Trippin' down the old hippie highway/ I got thinking about you again/ Wonderin' how it really was for you/ and how it happened in the end." It's a piece of Americana, sentimental about the Hippie Highway, looking back to registering for the draft with a friend, "laughing all the way." It repeats the lyrics "roger and out, good buddy," and you realize that it's a song about warmly remembering a friend who died in the Vietnam War.

"Roger and Out" is Neil making peace with his past, and, even though I'm sure he didn't conceive of it this way, the era of On the Beach and Tonight's the Night. It's a warmer and more effective look back than the straightforwardly sentimental Prairie Wind. Coming after the album's protest-rock party-songs, it's a little bit of closure, looking back on other hard times that passed and someone that was there with him.

Because while this album might be a lightning-rod, a political jeremiad, a hard-rock triumph, a more topical update of Green Day's American Idiot, a great complement to Pearl Jam's new release, and Neil's most complete work since the peerless Rust Never Sleeps, it's a major development in Neil's career. This is Neil being young again, and he's bringing it all back home.

Living With War is now available for download on iTunes and available on CD. If you don't want to pay for it, e-mail Cole Slaw Blog, and maybe I'll buy it for you.

Monday link-o-rama

It's been a while since I enriched everyone's hump day with a panoply of links. So rather than make you wait, I present Cole Slaw Blog's first Monday link-o-rama, a.k.a "Shit you can read when you're not doing work.":
  • No one's really known quite what to make of the offense binge in baseball. Huffy sportswriters predicted a season of banjo hitting now that steroids were clearly not being done by anyone at all, but runs and homers are still up. I think someone suggested maybe the balls were being stitched tighter. The seamheads at Baseball Prospectus have actually gathered and studied data (Joe Morgan, Cardinal Bellarmine and others, please avert your eyes ). Their conclusion: The pitchers who competed in the World Baseball Classic have sucked this year, and said sucking accounts for a lot of the league-wide jump in ERA.
  • More baseball. Here's an article on Barry Bonds and race. Here's another. To me, race doesn't totally explain the difference between the public and media response to his charge at the record books and that accorded to Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa. But it's also certainly not not an issue, either. Thankfully, our nation's greatest thinkers -- sportswriters and TV commentators -- are on the case to unpack everything for us. Much like that snotty maitre'd at Chez Luis, I weep for the future.
  • Just to make it three baseball links in a row: Apparently, minor league baseball is getting what it deserves for hiring scab umpires: There's real evidence of hometown bias. (via Deadspin).
  • Comments gadfly Crunk Raconteur brings up a good point: Imagine the media response if Bill Clinton or Al Gore claimed to have caught a perch three pounds larger than the record. Yeah, I thought so.
  • In monkey news, zookeepers at the London Zoo had to walk around with mustard-covered cell phones to get monkeys to stop stealing them from zoo-goers. Mabye my co-blogger is right. His career advice to me has consisted of constant and repeated pleas for me to become a zookeeper. And, well, I do like putting condiments on my personal effects.
  • OK, one more baseball-related item, but it's not a link. At a Derby party this weekend, I noticed a guest drinking from a paper cup with a curious tilted 'E' logo on it. Closer inspection revealed that it was indeed a cup from Enron Field. The guest said he got it at a pizza place on Seventh Avenue, between 25th and 23rd. Readers, you know what to do ...

Comedy is tragedy, plus time

The former director, in happier times.

Porter Goss, delivering a commencement address at Tiffin University:
"If this were a graduating class of CIA case officers, my advice would be short and to the point: Admit nothing, deny everything and make counteraccusations," Goss, a former CIA officer, told the audience. "Clearly, that doesn't translate well beyond the world of the clandestine service, so I have some other thoughts I'd like to offer."
Also:
As he left his home in Washington yesterday, Goss told CNN his departure is "just one of those mysteries" and declined to elaborate.
Those mysteries include OMG hookers!

George W. Bush, speaking to German magazine Bild am Sonntag:

"You know, I've experienced many great moments and it's hard to name the best," Bush told weekly Bild am Sonntag when asked about his high point since becoming president in January 2001.

"I would say the best moment of all was when I caught a 7.5 pound (3.402 kilos) perch in my lake," he told the newspaper in an interview published on Sunday.

An earlier comment, via Digby's blog:
I know the human being and fish can coexist peacefully.

Saturday, May 06, 2006

Sobriety and fake football: things that happened while I was sick

I didn't drink. Nothing makes you feel more like a loser than spending Friday and Saturday night cooped up in the apartment -- except, perhaps, for feeling like a loser because you're not drunk.

I watched historical biopics. Alexander? Not as bad as the reviews said. Not at all. I attribute the negativity to an overdue Colin Farrell backlash. Parts of it were slow, and Farrell was occasionaly ridiculous, but it was a pretty engaging movie. Battle sequences were good, scenery was cool, the story line was sufficiently absorbing -- you could do worse than find it on HBO. Also on HBO was the excellent Elizabeth I. Very little by way of sex or violence, but it's an involving, smart movie about the politics in Elizabeth's royal court. It brought back lots of memories from Michael McDonald's class on British history. I like my liberal education.

I played several games of NCAA 2006. Continuing my mission to play at least two seasons in each of the BCS conferences, I'm tearing it up as South Carolina, including a 49-10 smackdown of Texas A&M to win the national championship and finish the year undefeated.

I read European history. I finished R.J.B. Bosworth's Mussolini's Italy, and started Tony Judt's Postwar. I've just scratched Postwar, but Judt writes clearly and beautifully, and this is one of those books that makes you feel smarter with every page.

I googled former irritants. Not enemies, excactly, but people who got under my skin during my 20 years of formal education. I'm happy to report that none of them are up to anything remarkable.

I got messed up on allergy medication. All along, I was pretty sure that this was a cold. I haven't had allergies since junior high. Just in case, I took a couple allergy pills this afternoon. By then, I was on the rebound, feelin' all right, and took them as a precaution. Bad idea. I immediately went cold on my couch and haven't felt the same all day. Instead of having beers in the West Village, I'm sitting in my living room, feeling vaguely sedated, and watching a DVD of Six Feet Under. Patrick Kennedy's explanations now sound more credible. Take two pills and I'd probably crash my car into a barrier, too.

Score one for Cleveland


So this is what it's like to be a fan of a winning team. I'd forgotten. Not a title-winning team. Or even a pennant-winning team. But right now, the Cleveland Basketballing Cavaliers are winners.

I know it's been a crappy week here at CSB, but it's been a great week in Cleveland. Tonight the 2006 Cavaliers become the first Cleveland team to advance in the postseason since the 1997 Indians beat Baltimore in the ALCS.

The Cavs beat the Washington Wizards 114-133 in overtime Friday night. And although it wasn't LeBron who made the winning shot, he helped set it up. Damon Jones (who had spent the previous three hours or so on the bench, probably scanning the crowd for hot chicks, wondering if he set his fantasy baseball rotation and daydreaming about cheeseburgers for all I know) made a 17-footer I'll probably not forget for a long time to put the Cavs ahead for good in the final seconds.

But that wouldn't have been good enough to win had Wizards star Gilbert Arenas made either of the two free throws he had just seconds before. After he missed the first one, LeBron came up to whisper in his ear before the second one. Accounts differ as to what His Bronness said, but whatever he said was clearly effective. Ballgame, as they say.

It's a hell of a thing, being party to Cleveland sports success. I know the Cavs have a date with the Pistons for what is likely to be a brutal and short series. But until Sunday, they're still the victors. I haven't enjoyed this kind of success in a long time. For example, the beer in my refrigerator which will soon be opened in honor of the Cavs was purchased, legally, by me. Such a thing was impossible when the Indians were busy breaking hearts in the National Capital Area. For another example, 1997 was a whole century ago.

I bring up that Tribe team for an important reason. As a friend (and occasional commenter here) pointed out, that series was much like this one. A quick look at Baseball Reference shows that the Indians, who eliminated the Orioles in six games, won their games in the following manner.

  • By one run, after scoring three in the eighth inning.
  • On a steal of home plate. In the 12th inning. They stole home.
  • With a walkoff single in the bottom of the ninth ... after Baltimore took the lead in the top half of the inning.
  • And in the series clincher, the teams were scoreless until Tony Fernandez hit a solo homer in the top of the 11th. Jose Mesa shut the door and 1-0 was your final.
The spiritual twin to Damon Jones, as far as we're concerned.

Back to tonight: The Cavs, meanwhile, after a Game 1 blowout, won on an astonishing, short-range basket by LeBron, an even more astounding baseline drive and feather-soft layup by LeBron and then Damon Jones' dagger, tonight. The Wizards were seriously close to winning this in five games. But, as weird as this sounds to say, Cleveland just got the breaks.

Although that 1997 season ended in heartbreak, it was still something special. And while I'm reasonably confident that the Cavs don't have the horses to get past the Pistons, I still can't wait to see what LeBron and the rest of the Cavs do against them.

The Cavaliers, for the first time since I was in grade school are officially something special. A Cleveland team is making its fans happy, rather than enraging and embittering them. Promise has been redeemed, cashed in for actual, tangible results. For now, this is enough.

Friday, May 05, 2006

An apology

This has been the lowest-quality week of this site's fourteen-month life.

You deserve better.

First was the Colbert post. At the time I wrote it, the only places talking about it were hard-core lefty blogs, and I thought I was doing a small service by putting it out there. By mid-week the story was ubiquitous, and not having even attempted any original analysis, my post on the subject was, in retrospect, a waste of space. Flop's Loyalty Day post was fine, but I had to read it a couple of times to figure out what was going on.

Next came the navel-gazing about falsely thinking that I'm sick. That turned out to be premature. I've got a cold, and it's completely fucked up my shit. Living in denial won't speed the recovery. It's May, I have a cold, and it sucks.

Hence, all you've gotten this week are two crap posts from me, and Flop baiting the Soviet Union.

Let's go home early and forget this week ever happened, okay? If there's another week this bad, the bank will foreclose, leaving us with no choice but to pack up the truck and leave the Dust Bowl.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

The power of suggestion

I don't know what your work friends are like. Mine are like elementary school friends, in the best way. I talk to them throughout the day, and like them a lot. Most of the conversation is the workplace equivalent of making fun of the teacher, with some current events and pop culture in the mix. Also like my elementary school friends, there's not a lot of talk about personal life, and it's rare to go drinking at the end of the day. (I say "rare," because the Matts and I would occasionally celebrate a hard day of second grade by drinking 40's on the kickball diamond.) There's the occasional wedding or apartment party, but knowing that I'm going to see these people first thing on Monday morning, it's rare for me to end the night dancing the Macarena on somebody's coffee table. (I say "rare," because lapses in judgment are known to happen.)

It's easy to forget how influential your elementary school friends were. If someone was out of school, the entire class could feel messed up. If your best friend got the chicken pox, you'd get them soon too. Dig-Dug? Yes, an excellent game. In the most guileless way, we moved in herds.

My friend S. wasn't feeling well today. It happened that I woke up feeling like I had the onset of a cold. As the morning went along, I was feeling better.

Until I talked to S. He's my age. I've worked on the same projects with him for the past six months. As S. explained his symptoms, I began to feel progressively more unhealthy. He had a fever? Suddenly, I had a fever. Muscles ache? Shit, me too. By the time we finished our conversation, I was ready to drop some Nyquil and catch an ambulance home.

I spent the afternoon cursing my bad luck. From now on, it would only be orange juice for me! And no more Marlboro lights. This sickness -- the fever, the sniffles, the achy joints -- was what I deserved for my bad behavior. Curses.

I left work at the usual hour, hoping to rest on the couch and recover quickly.

Then I got home. I wasn't sick, I was just tired -- the result of staying up too late reading, and waking up too early from a honking car. Hearing S. talk about not feeling well convinced me that I was sick, too.

I've never been a hypochondriac, and never considered myself suggestible. I can't believe that I've become this retarded.

Monday, May 01, 2006

Does this mean we get to buy CCCP jerseys now?

Here was what was going to be my dyspeptic post of the day:
Hey, it's May 1! What better day to just up and decree that today we
must proclaim our love for our contry. Man, who else used to do that
shit?


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iF1LvSlx6MM

I hope everyone who voted for George W. Bush is happy.


Then I found out that, despite what Wonkette implies by heaping sarcastic praise on Tony Snow, Loyalty Day appears to have been around since the 1930's. Who knew?

This doesn't make Bush any less of a despot. Under a president who respected the rule of law, Loyalty Day would be a curiosity, a reminder of worse times. Under this one, it totally seems like some sort of Rovian fever dream cooked up to supplement the pre-emptive wars, fear-mongering and presidential power grabs that have tainted our country for the past five years.

Yes, it's still our country. When do we get it back?

Apropos of almost nothing, remember when the media could get outraged about stuff? Like, say vandalized keyboards?

Stephen Colbert's big balls

Unless you spent part of Sunday reading left-wing blogs (and seriously, you have no excuse, because the weather in New York sucked) you might have missed the buzz about Stephen Colbert's Saturday night face-to-face takedown of President Bush. It brings to mind Rodney Dangerfield's days at Bushwood Country Club, except that in this Bushwood, Colbert is the one who gets all the respect. Here's the video of his monologue:



Here's the clip of Colbert's tryout as White House spokesman. It starts benignly before turning into a cutting riff on Iraq.