Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Give me the boid

For some reason I was thinking of Tweety Bird last night.  Not the yellow, innocent one most people think of; the real, early, pink smartass.

For the first couple of appearances, he just pretended to be innocent, and was actually pretty pugnacious.  These two show him at his best.  Bonus: A Tale of Two Kitties has the amazing duo Babbit and Catstello.  Clearly of its era (1942,) the gag timing is spot-on.

A Tale of Two Kitties



Birdy and the Beast

Sunday, January 27, 2013

And now for something completely different

Ah, Monty Python.  I was raised on you; we used to watch you on CBC, and I've been into you ever since.  Wordplay, absurdity, funny songs... You make fun of everyone and everything.  You even bring history into many of your bits; "Background to History" is part music interview, part history lesson.

I must be feeling nostalgic; lately I've been looking at videos of things I've liked since I was a kid.  There will be more to come, I'm sure.  Even Python is a deep well, so don't be surprised to see another post or two about them-  maybe some of the most popular sketches, or a collection of songs.  For now, here are a few focusing more on wordplay that I find very funny.

Bookshop



Election Night Special



Cheese Shop



Background to History



Annoying Peasant



Argument Clinic

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Dear Johnny


I first heard you on my parents' AM radio- A Boy Named Sue.  Drifted away, but found you again later, and still love you.  Wish I had seen you in person.  Desperate enough to keep an eye on impersonators, hoping to see one of them someday...

A Boy Named Sue



Big River- I have probably heard the Dead's version more, but love both



Walk the Line- this one's for you, Miss Mox



Hurt- his covers sound like they're his own songs



Ring of Fire

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

What? Wait, what?


So Rush is being an asshole.  Again.  Or, still.

Oh, it doesn't surprise me.  I pretty much ignore him nowadays.  But sometimes the sheer nastiness of his assholery astounds me; add that to the fact that I still hear people talk about what he said on his show as if it were gospel truth, and sometimes I get irritated by him.  I actually used to listen to him years ago, when all my car radio would pick up out in the boonies was AM. I figured it was healthy, something to keep my blood pressure from getting too low.  And, you know, it was a bit of "know thine enemy."  But he kept saying such stupid, stupid things, and his callers kept agreeing with him, and I got too mad and depressed.  I'd rather listen to static- it makes more sense.

I know, he gets paid to say dumb shit.  I know, he is an "entertainer," not a politician.  I know.  But so many people take what he says as truth.  I hear it all the time: "Rush said gas is going to be $6 a gallon next month."  Heads nod.  Didn't happen, but people have short memories.

This latest comment... Wow.  Apparently now that "liberals have normalized gay marriage" they're going to "normalize pedophilia."  Because yeah, that's a liberal idea, and ideal.  It's not like many pedophiles are conservatives, or priests or anything.  I really don't know which angle to start attacking his statements from.  I mean, start with the inherent assumption that liberals are a homogenous group, plotting to impose their whims on the world.  (Of course, that's exactly what Rush's listeners believe.)

Maybe the whole "slippery slope" argument that one thing leads to another?  Because, you know, why would we treat gay people like, well, people?  It's an outrage!  How dare anyone try to "normalize" respecting other people?!  Before society (generally) accepted the rights of gay people as just people, we had discrimination and violence against them.  (I know we still do. But it's better; I think we're past the tipping point.)  Do conservatives think those were "the good old days"? Shall we go back to when that was illegal too?  Is that, honestly, what conservatives want?  Because it sure seems like it.

Or, maybe it's the marriage thing.  Accepting gay marriage?  Once you do that, why not marry your dog?  And if we go back up that slippery slope a bit, we'll find a time when black and white people weren't allowed to marry.  Then that got normalized, and society has been going to hell ever since, right?

And of course, I just don't get any of the arguments against gay marriage.  Religion?  Fine, you have a religious objection, maybe don't allow them to get married in your church.  But you have no right to restrict what others do.  Mind your own business; don't marry someone of the same sex yourself, but let others be.  That's, whaddayacallit, the American way!  Freedom to do as we please, at least up to the point that it harms others.  And what harm does gay marriage do?  Does it hurt straight marriage?  Please.  That's in bad enough shape.  This is likely to help.  Good examples of loving partners, of families, would be a good thing, gay or straight.  It boggles me that the family values crowd opposes welcoming loving families.  They should be pushing FOR gay marriage.

How 'bout some basic human decency, Rush?  And the same goes for conservatives in general, or more specifically, those whose 'conservatism' seems to consist of vilifying others.


Thursday, January 10, 2013

Dulls the pain

I've been into Morphine for years now, and wish I had gotten to see them live.  Sadly, the frontman passed away many years ago.  I'm not big into jazz, but that's not quite what they do.  Bluesy rocky jazz?  That starts to come close.  This is another band that makes it really hard to pick favorites.  I could easily post twice this many and not cover all the songs I love by them, much less the ones I really like.

Buena- probably the first song I heard by them

Candy

You Look Like Rain

Cure For Pain

You Speak My Language

I'm Yours You're Mine





Tuesday, January 8, 2013

A few interesting articles

I've been collecting articles from the Economist lately.  I'm an off and on subscriber (it's just too expensive) but I've always liked their take on things.  Here are a few articles I've found interesting in the last couple of months.

State of Denial- a take on  the sinking ship that is the GOP

Now, Hug a Republican- a hard thing to do, I know, and a somewhat out of date article; but it still has some good commentary on current politics

The Price of Hubris- more pre-election commentary, with some choice quotes

The Rich and the Rest- reflections on the disparities in the American economy






Sunday, January 6, 2013

Ignorance- he has it

I saw a bumper sticker the other day that pissed me off.  "MY business- I did it!"  Really?  Are you that stupid?  Or just that greedy?  I think it's willful ignorance, a trait that seems to be common amongst conservatives.  Don't like something?  Pretend it doesn't exist.  Don't like someone?  Ignore what they're actually saying, and twist a few words around into something you can pretend to be righteously angry about.

Anybody who actually watched, listened to, or read what Obama said about business in that quote realizes what he said, and what he meant, is that even someone who starts their own business has some government support- if nothing else, from highways and other infrastructure that make it possible for the economy to run smoothly.  The internet, nowadays, is obviously very important to business- and is a creation of the government.  Of course, you deserve credit for what you start.  But in the real world, a reasonable, polite person would give some credit, a nod of the head, to others who helped them get started.   Of course, those traits don't seem to apply to many conservatives nowadays.  Or maybe they just think they don't need fire departments, police, etc.  Well, until they do need them.  But then, these are the same kind of people who vote against taxes for emergency services, schools, etc., then complain when those same services aren't up to snuff when they need them.

I wish, over and over, that we could talk about real things, about real problems, instead of getting bogged down in arguments about things that weren't even said, that didn't happen, that aren't real.  I wish people would understand the facts before they form their vicious little opinions based on misunderstandings and distortions.  I know, if wishes were fishes the sea would be full...


Tuesday, January 1, 2013

In with the new...

I got into the Black Keys a few years ago, and still enjoy them.  Haven't seen them live.  It was hard to pick favorites, but here are a few to ring in the new year.

You're the One



Set You Free



Have Love, Will Travel



My Mind is Ramblin



Nobody But You