Marc Weisblott was one of blogland’s savviest culture commentators, but he quit blogging. So said I on Monday. He read the item and on Tuesday began posting again. This time he’s calling his posts radio weisblogg, “news and commentary about the evolution of AM/FM etc.” Have a look while it lasts. You’ll see what I meant. … The Burlington Free […]
BAD RAP
Jazz drummer Max Roach’s remark on music education and rap — “People who voted for defunding of music education programs in public schools are getting what they paid for” — drew comments. One reader wrote that the poet John Ashbery said somewhere: “The only thing worse than rap is French rap.” Anybody know where? Another […]
ALL JAZZED UP
A friend of mine just got back from Japan. He’s a record producer, Bill Reed by name, who has also published two books: “Hot From Harlem,” a history of black entertainment that profiles key figures, and “Early Plastic,” a memoir of growing up in West Virginia and coming to New York, where he landed in Greenwich Village and became a […]
SING IT
Guess who the critic is talking about: 1) Frank Sinatra2) Bing Crosby3) Mel Tormé4) Tony Bennett The man practices artless art. He takes verbal liberties, even makes occasional mistakes. Since he doesn’t seem to notice or care, no one else can. He chats between songs. He invites the audience to ignore the command in the […]
MORE SWORN TESTIMONY
Here we go again. Watch this morning’s hearings live on the Web as the 9/11 commission takes more sworn testimony in public. EmailFacebookTwitterReddit
TO DO BEFORE YOU DIE
There are only two weeks left to tell the world what you want to do before you die. So say a pair of editors preparing a book of last wishes to be published (they say) early next year by Little, Brown & Company. I haven’t checked with Little, Brown. The editors, Mike and Chris, have […]
GOOGLING JEW, CHRISTIAN, MUSLIM
They’ve even noticed the controversy in India. Until the other day if you typed the word “Jew” into Google, the first search result turned out to be a link to an anti-Semitic Web site. A group called removejewwatch wants the site removed from the Google search engine and is asking at least 50,000 people to […]
THE USUAL TAP DANCE
Tom Shales had the best commentary and roundup I’ve read of yesterday’s sad little press gathering in the East Room of the White House, where our Fearless Maximum Leader was seen on television doing his usual, stumbling tap dance. Shales began: “When I say something, I mean it,” George W. Bush said decisively near the end of last […]
TO THE MAX: MISSION NOT ACCOMPLISHED
Whatever else there is to say, the guy is simply out of his league. He wasn’t elected to the presidency in the first place. He didn’t deserve it in the second place. He’s proved himself incompetent in the third place. “I don’t plan on losing my job,” he said tonight, during his news conference (only […]
SWORN TESTIMONY
Here we go. Watch this morning’s hearings live on the Web as the 9/11 commission takes more sworn testimony in public. EmailFacebookTwitterReddit
ACROSS THE RUBICON
Did anybody see Chalmers Johnson Sunday night on C-Span2 Book TV? It was a rerun of an interview done in March at the Los Angeles Public Library by Warren Olney (of L.A. radio station KCRW), and it was mesmerizing. All Olney had to do was listen. Johnson recently published “The Sorrows of Empire.” His thesis in […]
AIRPLANE READING
Blogging as self-promotion: A book review of mine appeared Sunday in the Chicago Sun-Times: It’s hard to say which comes off worse in Herman Wouk’s latest novel, his first in a decade: the U.S. Congress or the American press. “A Hole in Texas” offers the choice between two emblematic stereotypes: a red-faced opportunist who heads […]
BLOGGER STARDUST
A friend asked (this is true): “How’s the blogging life?” My reply: “Underpaid and overrated.” The overraters tend to be johnnys-come-lately who believe they’ve had a revelation when, in fact, all they’ve done is plugged in. The underpayers are everyone else — in other words, the readers. The truth is that, like much else on […]
STONE GETS TOUGH ON FIDEL
Oliver Stone’s “Looking for Fidel,” to premiere Wednesday on HBO, is called the follow-up in tough mode to “Commandante,” his previous softball portrait of the Cuban leader. This time, instead of tossing bouqets at Castro in a loving (some said fawning) approach to El Commandante, Stone reportedly confronts him about his vicious crackdown on political […]
THE CONDI CONTEXT, PART 2
There are plenty of editorials to choose from this morning to describe Condoleezza Rice’s testimony at yesterday’s 9/11 hearing. (Here’s the complete transcript.) We made our snap judgment about the Condi context yesterday while the hearing was still in progress: “She may well be remembered as Condoleezza (“Cover Your Ass”) Rice.” Today’s New York Times […]
WHERE’S THE ‘TUDE?
John Powers writes in L.A. Weekly: “Air America has a long way to go.” Too true. “Most of the left listened to the shows with dawning, er, yawning horror,” he says. (Remember this? < FONT color=#003399>“Hate to say it, but what a bore”?) Powers figures the audience is willing to cut the network some slack […]
THREE DOTS
Has anybody anybody said it better? … Meantime, Oriana Fallaci is at it again. … Check out today’s Cubarte Newsletter. … It reports on everything from a recent opera production of Mozart’s “Cossi Fan Tutti” at Havana’s Grand Theatre to Oliver Stone’s film, “Looking for Fidel,” based on his 30-hour interview with Fidel Castro, to be aired April 14 by […]