Thinking About The Conversation

Ken AshfordTheatreLeave a Comment

For years, my brother has urged me to see the 1974 Coppola film, The Conversation.  I didn’t resist the suggestion; I just never got around to it.

But TIVO apparently thought I would enjoy it, because it recorded it the other day (For those of you without TIVO, the device will record shows it thinks you might like, based on your viewing habits).  So I watched it.

Yeah, it was good.  Bit dated, a bit slow, but a great cast.

And after it was over, I recalled a conversation my mother and brother had about the movie — specifically, the key line mentioned by Frederick Forrest/Cindy Williams (the "conversation" of The Conversation).  Yeah, I thought it was a bit of a cheat [warning — spoiler] myself, but that directorial trick wasn’t pivotal to my enjoyment of the movie.

Anyway, as I was watching it, I thought it would work well as a play.  And lo and behold, today I read that it is one, heading for off-off-Broadway in April (it’s been playing in Chicago for a couple of years).

Should be interesting.

Conversation

Since When Am I “Wealthy”?

Ken AshfordEconomy & Jobs & DeficitLeave a Comment

Since today I guess.  The news:

House leaders and the White House on Thursday reached a tentative agreement on an economic stimulus package of roughly $150 billion that would pay stipends of $300 to $1,200 per family and provide tax incentives for businesses to encourage spending.

Okay.  Well it won’t help the economy and it will add to the deficit.  Why?  Because most people won’t make extensive, economy-reviving purchases on the basis of a single windfall. They are smart enough to know that their spending habits should be based on something lasting — a permanent tax cut or a wage increase, for instance — and data on rebates in 1975 and 2001 bear this out.

…[T]he Bush administration and House Republicans agreed that the stipend of at least $300 would be paid to all workers receiving a paycheck, even those who did not earn enough to pay taxes last year.

Cool.  I’m a worker and I receive a paycheck.

Workers who paid income taxes could receive more than $300, and families with children would receive an additional $300 per child, up to a cap of $1,200. The stipend, which some lawmakers were calling a “tax rebate,” would be subject to income limits so that the wealthiest taxpayers would not receive it. The White House official familiar with the outlines of the accord said that payments would go to individuals earning up to $75,000 and couples earning up to $150,000.

Wait.  What?  First it was — and I quote — "at least $300 would be paid to all workers receiving a paycheck" and a paragraph later, "all" apparently doesn’t mean "all".

Fine.  I guess I can’t be part of the stimulus package.  Because I’m soooooo rich (*chuckle* *snort*).

Bastards.

Extended Album Art*

Ken AshfordPopular CultureLeave a Comment

Abbeyroadevolv

Soundsofsilenceoptimised

Floydyeah

Queenii_2

Chess_records

*  Fun fact for kids:  Recorded music used to be "burned" onto flat vinyl things called "records".  They were laughably large — bigger than CDs even.  They were packaged in cardboard holders.  One of the nice things about these "albums" was the covers.  Before videos, a lot of artistic effort was made into making interesting album art covers.

Not Happy With The Clintons

Ken AshfordElection 2008Leave a Comment

The bill of particulars, from an article by Paul Waldman:

Pick your tired metaphor — take-no-prisoners, brass knuckles, no-holds-barred, playing for keeps — however you describe it, the Clinton campaign is not only not going easy on Obama, they’re doing so in awfully familiar ways. So many of the ingredients of a typical GOP campaign are there, in addition to fear. We have the efforts to make it harder for the opponent’s voters to get to the polls (the Nevada lawsuit seeking to shut down at-large caucus sites in Las Vegas, to which the Clinton campaign gave its tacit support). We have, depending on how you interpret the events of the last couple of weeks, the exploitation of racial divisions and suspicions (including multiple Clinton surrogates criticizing Obama for his admitted teenage drug use). And most of all, we have an utterly shameless dishonesty.

On some of these points, Clinton hasn’t yet reached GOP levels of underhandedness. But on the simple question of honestly characterizing their opponent, the Clintons are giving any Republican campaign in memory a run for its money.

The latest example is the Clinton camp’s extremely effective effort to twist some remarks Obama made about Ronald Reagan and the years since his presidency beyond all recognition, which came up in their debate Monday night. In an interview with the editorial board of the Reno Gazette-Journal, Obama had said that Reagan had successfully "changed the trajectory of America, in a way that Richard Nixon did not, and in a way that Bill Clinton did not," a claim few people of any ideological stripe would dispute. He also said, "I think it’s fair to say the Republicans were the party of ideas for a pretty long chunk of time over the last 10 or 15 years, in the sense that they were challenging conventional wisdom."

***

And that was only the latest. During the whole messy back-and-forth over race, a disagreement neither candidate seemed truly comfortable having, Bill Clinton went on The Tom Joyner Morning Show  (one of the most widely-syndicated radio programs in the country), and claimed that Obama’s advisors had said all sorts of terrible things about his wife. "No one," he said, "should accuse someone like Hillary of being a racist who’s responsible for the assassination of Benazir Bhutto." That would indeed be an awful charge to make, had anyone actually made it. But no one had….

Then there’s the argument Bill Clinton made on multiple occasions, that Obama couldn’t say he had always opposed the Iraq war: "How could you say that when you said in 2004 you didn’t know how you would have voted on the resolution?" As the article in question read, Obama "declined to criticize Senators Kerry and Edwards for voting to authorize the war, although he said he would not have done the same based on the information he had at the time. ‘But, I’m not privy to Senate intelligence reports,’ Mr. Obama said. ‘What would I have done? I don’t know. What I know is that from my vantage point the case was not made.’"

One might argue that although Clinton distorted Obama’s comment in attempting to argue falsely that Obama at some point went from being a war opponent to being something else, it’s hardly so egregious a sin of campaign legerdemain as to be unforgivable. Perhaps. So let’s try this one: Obama has said we should consider the possibility of lifting the cap on Social Security taxes, which in 2008 stands at $102,000 — any income above that amount is not subject to the tax. There are reasonable arguments on both sides of this question, but the whole point of such a move would be to make the tax less regressive than it is now, by making the wealthy pay the same share of their income in the tax as everyone else.

When Hillary Clinton decided to go after Obama for considering lifting the cap, she did it in the kind of deceptive, demagogic way you’d expect from a Republican: by sending out a mailer in Nevada accusing Obama of having "a plan with a trillion dollar tax increase on America’s hard-working families." Obama had no "plan" — he merely said that lifting the cap was something worth considering — and the people affected would be upper-middle class and wealthy Americans, not the blue-collar folk implied by the term "America’s hard-working families."

I know that’s a long excerpt, but it accurately describes the Clinton campaign tactics lately.  Very underhanded, very smear-y.

Ezra Klein says so what.  This is good training for Obama who might have to actually face underhanded tactics from a Republican opponent.

Well, maybe so.  But I’d rather see a Democrat fight against an underhanded Republican opponent, than fight underhandedly like a Republican opponent.

If Hillary Clinton can’t win without playing political games of deception, and telling lies — things she knows are lies — about her opponents, then maybe she’s not fit to the nomination based on her merits.

Sadly, it seems to be working in her favor so far.  But not with this voter.  I recognize that Obama doesn’t want to engage in tit-for-tat smearing, and I praise him for that.  But he’s got to fight back soon.  If Hillary wants to chastize Obama for some business associates he had 20 years ago, I suppose Obama could play that game as well.  And we’re talking about the Clintons here — there’s plenty of meat there.

UPDATE:  Clinton’s former Secretary of Labor and NPR contributor, Robert Reich, also ain’t too happy with his former boss (NOTE: they were also good friends since their college days).  From his blog:

I write this more out of sadness than anger. Bill Clinton’s ill-tempered and ill-founded attacks on Barack Obama are doing no credit to the former President, his legacy, or his wife’s campaign. Nor are they helping the Democratic party. While it may be that all is fair in love, war, and politics, it’s not fair – indeed, it’s demeaning – for a former President to say things that are patently untrue (such as Obama’s anti-war position is a “fairy tale”) or to insinuate that Obama is injecting race into the race when the former President is himself doing it. Meanwhile, the attack ads being run in South Carolina by the Clinton camp which quote Obama as saying Republicans had all the ideas under Reagan, is disingenuous. For years, Bill Clinton and many other leading Democrats have made precisely the same point – that starting in the Reagan administration, Republicans put forth a range of new ideas while the Democrats sat on their hands. Many of these ideas were wrong-headed and dangerous, such as supply-side economics. But for too long Democrats failed counter with new ideas of their own; they wrongly assumed that the old Democratic positions and visions would be enough. Clinton’s 1992 campaign – indeed, the entire “New Democratic” message of the 1990s – was premised on the importance of taking back the initiative from the Republicans and offering Americans a new set of ideas and principles. Now, sadly, we’re witnessing a smear campaign against Obama that employs some of the worst aspects of the old politics.

See also: "Some In Party Bristle At Clintons’ Attacks" – Washington Post

Cloverfield

Ken AshfordPopular Culture2 Comments

Yeah.  I’ve been sucked in by the trailers, and like many, this is an action movie I actually kinda wanted to see.  But now that it’s out, I keep reading this a lot:

Cloverfield" is the first adrenaline-pumping monster hit of the year, bringing in more than $40 million dollars on its opening weekend. The thriller is told from the point of view of five young New Yorkers using their handheld camera. But for some viewers, being "part" of the movie is making them sick — literally.

One blogger on the popular movie database IMDB.com said, "I had to get up and leave the theater for nearly 20 minutes just to keep from hurling." Other moviegoers have reported being nauseated and dizzy.

Most viewers are unaffected by the film, but for those who are, experts say the problem is in their heads.

"This is a classic case of vertigo," said Dr. Michael G. Stewart, chairman of otorhinolaryngology (ear, nose and throat medicine) at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weil Cornell Medical Center. "You can look around and feel like things are moving, when they aren’t."

I’m not sure if the movie promoters will consider that good publicity, or bad.

UPDATE:  And look out.  There’s more movies being made from a "handheld" perspective:

UPDATE:  Cloverflu hits Emily (see comments)

What Do I Care If Teens Have Sex?

Ken AshfordSex/Morality/Family ValuesLeave a Comment

Over at Slate, William Saletan notes the 35 year anniversary of Roe v. Wade, and tries to move the debate forward (good luck with that, Bill!!) by suggesting that pro-choicers like me embrace the idea that the ideal abortion rate is zero.

Well, okay.  Sure.  Natch.  I think the ideal abortion rate should be zero.  I also think the ideal cancer rate should be zero too.  But let’s face it.  It ain’t gonna happen.

But somewhere in that morass of an article, he shifts the subject to teen sex, noting with approval some comments of NARAL President Nancy Keenan which suggest that she supports the ideal teen sex rate also being zero.

Well, maybe she does, and maybe she doesn’t.  As for me, I don’t know why we as a society should necessarily strive for a teen sex rate of zero.  As long as the sex is safe and consensual, the participants have a reasonable understanding about what they’re getting in to emotionally and physically (at least, an "understanding" on a par with the average adult), then why exactly should we, as a society, care?

Saletan’s reasoning only makes sense if you assume, a priori, that teenagers will never engage in safe sex, and/or are always ill-equipped to "handle" it emotionally.  And while this is probably true on the average (compared to adults), is it true across the board such that we should declare an "ideal" teen sex rate to be zero?

To me, that’s flawed logic.  It’s like saying, teens in general — compared to adults, at least — are more reckless drivers, and therefore the "ideal" number of teen drivers should be zero. 

Well, no.  The premise is probably true, but it is too much of a generalization to make the conclusion valid. 

Now, I’m not a parent, and not too many teenagers run in my social circle.  Perhaps Saletan has access to more data than I.  But it seems to me there are probably hundreds of thousands of teenagers out there who are just as "mature" emotionally (if not more "mature") than many adults I know.  Is there any earthly reason why we should cringe at those teenagers having sex?  I mean, other than the fact that our society seems to cringe at the concept of sex?

“And Then Out Of Nowhere, Heath Ledger Appeared, Ran Into My Burning House And Saved My Kitten” (and Other Stories)

Ken AshfordIn PassingLeave a Comment

I’m sure he was a nice guy, but… come on:

Dena Michnowich of Glen Cove, New York
I was walking in the lower east side of Manhattan one day and I noticed a really cute man holding his little daughter on his shoulders. She looked just like him. He told her that they had to make a right and asked her to point them in the right direction, which she did. I soon realized that it was Heath Ledger and I got really excited. I was walking right up to them as they were waiting to cross the street. When I got close, I waved and he smiled at me.

R. of Perth, Western Australia
I grew up with Heath around the speedway racing circuit. I remember the night he was a little boy and his Dad was racing speed cars at Claremont Speedway (my dad was in the race, too). …Later Heath would pit crew for Graham Jones, and I crewed for my dad and brother. Heath and I were both the youngest on our crews so that meant our job was to take the fiberglass bonnets over to the hoses and wash the mud off after each race really dirty work but he managed to stay cleaner than the rest of us.

Crystal Davis of Toronto, Ontario
I met Heath in L.A. at a mall a year or so ago. I was staring at him working up the nerve to ask for an autograph. He saw me, started laughing and walked towards me. He said I was white as an "egg" and asked if he could do anything. I said, No thanks … yes I forgot to ask for the autograph. He touched my shoulder and told me to take it easy and walked away. He looked back several times and smiled. What a great memory I have of him. My prayers go out to his family and friends.

Dan Bova of Larchmont, New York
Once when I was driving in Brooklyn, I got a flat tire. As I was jacking up my car, this deep voice from behind me said, "Need a hand?" It was Heath Ledger. I couldn’t believe it. He helped jack up my car and change the tire. He was really good with tools!

UPDATE:  The Westboro Baptist cult assholes, known for their pickets at military funerals (and funerals for the Viriginia Tech students, the Omaha mall shooting victims, etc.), are at it again:

Heath