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Straight Up | Jan Herman

Arts, Media & Culture News with 'tude

WHEN SEMPER FI MEANS FAITHFUL TO THE TRUTH

October 10, 2004 by cmackie

Carlos Perez says he was so angry about 9/11 he quit his job as a firefighter and joined the Marines. “To be honest, I just wanted to take revenge.” He’s now in Iraq in a platoon known as the “81s” — so named for its 81 mm. mortar rounds — fighting with the 1st Battalion, […]

IT IS AS IT WAS

October 10, 2004 by cmackie

Over the weekend James Wolcott offered les mots justes on the second debate: “George Bush looked like a blister about to pop. Loud, mouthy, swaggering, interested only in hearing himself lay down the law, he behaved like a verbally abusive husband. Not a wifebeater but a browbeater with a bar-fighter’s grin.” As mentioned here earlier, imagine the […]

FROM SCOWL TO SCREECH

October 9, 2004 by cmackie

In last night’s second presidential debate, the Ninny in Chief once again demonstrated his congenital inadequacies as a statesman, much less as a debater. Alessandra Stanley read my mind in her description of him. Whether he’s snickering, winking, or getting hot under the collar, he’s just plain irritating. The guy’s a complete jerk. Imagine the […]

GREEKS BEARING (BAWDY) GIFTS

October 8, 2004 by cmackie

If there’s an ideology in “Lysistrata,” the antiwar play by Aristophanes, it’s the idea that a comedy 2,400 years old can still make us laugh — even when the double entendres and smutty jokes are delivered in Greek to an English-speaking audience of contemporary New Yorkers who not so long ago had Rudy Giuliani as mayor. […]

SOMETHING FISHY

October 8, 2004 by cmackie

I’m beginning to feel like Johnny One-Note: Here’s a revealing footnote to the definitive WMD report by the CIA’s Iraq Survey Group. It sketches how technical experts who doubted that Saddam Hussein had nuclear weapons were silenced by the Bush gang. Although it appeared in August 2003 at WorldNetDaily, it came to a Straight Up […]

THE BIG LIE AND THE LITTLE PREVARICATIONS

October 7, 2004 by cmackie

Will America stand still for the corruption of its democracy? That’s the real question voters are about to answer — whether they will accept The Big Lie or repudiate it, whether they will go along with The Liar or throw him out of office. On Nov. 2, voters will have their chance to redeem America’s […]

READING THE TEA LEAVES

October 6, 2004 by cmackie

Will voters ever get to see what those guys were scribbling so furiously on their notepads? Our guess is Mr. Sourpuss was doodling his Republican mantra, “significant progress,” and reminding himself not to curl his lip or spit too much venom. Although he was aiming for gravitas (that much overused word), he managed instead to throw […]

TUESDAY AYEM BRIEFING

October 5, 2004 by cmackie

Paul Bremer now says, “We never had enough troops on the ground” in Iraq. This confirms Tom Friedman’s description of the Rumsfeld Doctrine, noted in his column on Sunday, as “just enough troops to lose.” Meantime, if you didn’t read Sunday’s immense, detailed report by David Barst and Jeff Gerth on how the White House conjured […]

UNNATURAL SELECTION

October 5, 2004 by cmackie

Like the far more celebrated Nobel Prizes, the Darwin Awards have just been announced. Unlike the Nobels, however, the Darwins honor people who improve the human gene pool “by removing themselves from it. Of necessity, this honor is bestowed posthumously.” This year’s nominees, according to Insight magazine (which describes itself as a sister publication of […]

PM BRIEFING

October 5, 2004 by cmackie

Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi came halfway clean today. He admitted, in his first speech to the interim national assembly in Baghdad, that the country’s “nascent police force is underequipped and lacks the respect needed from the public to quell the insurgency,” Edward Wong reports. “The tone of the speech was a sharp departure from […]

AYEM BRIEFING

October 4, 2004 by cmackie

On the evidence of his first column in two months, the time off revived him. Tom Friedman was back Sunday with a bright thought: “Each time the Bush team had to choose between doing the right thing in the war on terrorism or siding with its political base and ideology, it chose its base and […]

JOHN WAYNE’S LESSON

October 2, 2004 by cmackie

Have a look at the face that launched a thousand slings and arrows. Ain’t it purty? (Scroll to photo.) It’s a reaction shot of the prevaricatin’ prez at the first debate in his real-life role as an Alfred E. Newman lookalike. He appears not to have been separated at birth. John Wayne, talking about his movie career […]

LAST BEST HOPE

October 2, 2004 by cmackie

It must be something in the air. Yours truly wrote here (Sept. 29): “If you attack [our prevaricatin’ prez] on everything he’s been wrong about, you appear unfocused and you sound diffuse. But if you narrow your attack to only one or two of his mistakes, you give him a pass on all the others.” Paul […]

KERRY WINS ON POINTS

October 1, 2004 by cmackie

Verdict on the first debate: The format didn’t kill the confrontation. Kerry won on points, for substance. If he’d had the wit to shake off his image as a stiff, he might have scored a knockout. He had the prevaricatin’ prez on the ropes, but never finished him off. The prez’s “jes’ folks” style worked […]

LIVE FROM MIAMI, IT’S THE BOTH OF THEM

September 30, 2004 by cmackie

Now that “the best debater since Cicero”(1) and the White House dolt who’s “won every debate he’s ever had”(2) have finished their warmups for tonight’s face-off, are we ready for the “naked moments”(3) live from Miami? Will there really be any “naked moments,” instead of stock phrases and mini-stump speeches? Doubtful. But please remember, “We’re […]

BIG TRIPPERS

September 30, 2004 by cmackie

American Public Radio’s Marketplace has a great new feature, Power Trips, which gives the lowdown on Congressional travel. Produced by Steve Henn, it tells who has accepted the most trips, and how much they spent. Here’s the top 100. Here’s who picks up the tab. Here are the destinations: “Hideaways tucked up in the mountains. […]

GOOSING AHNOLD

September 30, 2004 by cmackie

Seven years from now, California will ban foie gras if it comes from force-fed geese. Ahnold found it in his steroid heart yesterday to sign a bill ending “the force feeding of ducks, geese and other birds to produce the gourmet liver product.” The ban is to take effect in 2012. That answers the question: […]

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Jan Herman

When not listening to Bach or Cuban jazz pianist Chucho Valdes, or dancing to salsa, I like to play jazz piano -- but only in the privacy of my own mind.
Another strange fact... Read More…

About

My Books

Several books of poems have been published in recent years by Moloko Print, Statdlichter Presse, Phantom Outlaw Editions, and Cold Turkey … [Read More...]

Straight Up

The agenda is just what it says: news of arts, media & culture delivered with attitude. Or as Rock Hudson once said in a movie: "Man is the only … [Read More...]

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