• Get Your War On

    There is a new Get Your War On.

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  • Rebecca Moore

    I heard her perform during the Howl! festival in a program organized by Chris Rael of Church of Betty, also known as Mr. Penny Arcade. She is a warm performer, with rather orchestral writing for such a small ensemble. I liked the way she told the crowd which musician was most featured in each song they performed.

    Here is an MP3 of her cover of Earth, Wind and Fire’s Fantasy, from the Home Wreckordings 1997-1999 album. Also check out a rambling, amusing write-up on epinions.com.

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  • No special prosecutor, yet

    The Justice Department has launched a criminal investigation into the leak of a CIA operative’s identity and has asked the White House to preserve all documents that might relevant to the probe, U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft said Tuesday.

    I’m sure we can rest assured that Mr. Ashcroft will pursue this with the same zeal as he is using The PATRIOT Act.

    The best coverage of this story is coming from Joshua Marshall. No, he’s not in my blog links. After he got all weird and “oh my God what if Iraq does have WMD we better go to war!” I took him off.

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  • I love Naples

    It is the most beautiful mix of rough edges, sexiness, and elegance.

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    People enjoy their morning coffee in a candle lit bar, during a nationwide blackout, in Naples, Italy, Sunday, Sept. 28, 2003. (AP Photo/Salvatore Laporta)

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  • U.S. Navy ‘choked up’ over German tribute

    This story, from the September 19 newsletter of the German Embassy, made me cry when I read it.

    Navy officials were last week astounded and moved by a Germany frigate’s stirring tribute to their colleagues on the USS Doyle to mark the two-year anniversary of the September 11, 2001, attacks.

    Military vessels routinely render honors to military ships of other countries when they pass at sea by dipping their flag, as a sign of respect. But the German frigate Niedersachsen went above and beyond this normal gesture of respect when it asked to come alongside the USS Doyle on September 11, 2003, the second anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the US.

    On this day, as the two ships approached and passed, the entire crew of the German vessel stood top-side in dress-blues, holding their hats over their hearts. And as the ultimate gesture of respect, the Niedersachsen was flying the stars and stripes from its main mast. A US Naval Officer, in an email that also reached the German Embassy in Washington, told of how touched the US crew were by the “classy and emotional” presentation by their German counterparts.

    In an interview on National Public Radio’s All Things Considered on September 14, Commander Bernd Kuhbier of the FGS Niedersachsen explained this extraordinary act. “When you are on a warship, you don’t fly a foreign flag on the top mast,” Commander Kuhbier told host Steve Inskeep. “But we though the occasion was suitable to do that, so that’s what we did. We were proud to do so.”

    The unexpected gesture touched the US sailors, Vice Admiral Timothy LaFleur described in an unclassified email: “From their main mast they flew our flag and they held their covers over their hearts. Needless to say, the whole crew was choked up and a few tears formed in our eyes. Both ships stayed next to each other in silence for about 5 minutes. These are the days that remind me why I joined the Navy.”

    The FGS Niedersachsen and the USS Doyle are both part of NATO’s Standing Naval Force Atlantic (STANAVFORLANT), a permanent peacetime multinational naval squadron composed of destroyers, cruisers and frigates from the navies of various NATO nations.

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  • PFAW Auction

    People For the American Way are having a fund-raising auction.

    There are some cool items, including:

    • Kathleen Turner, sultry-voiced star of stage, screen, radio and television, will record a personalized message for your telephone answering machine.
    • You and a friend will sit down for lunch and conversation with two of Hollywood’s finest raconteurs, Academy Award-winning actor Richard Dreyfuss and actor, director and producer Bob Balaban (A Mighty Wind, Gosford Park, Deconstructing Harry). You will dine at their favorite restaurant at a mutually convenient date and time.
    • A rare piece by artist Jenny Holzer consisting of two LED Light Reader Boxes, one depicting language used by the political right, the other language used by the political left. Minimum Bid: $1000

    Someone needs to buy me the Jenny Holzer!

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  • A tech company that brags about the AFA?

    Wow. Some of my clients use Lyris to manage their mailing lists, so I get their monthly newsletter. Guess who they chose for their Customer Spotlight this month?

    American Family Association: Appealing to Family Values with ListManager

    Why did famous web marketing guru Seth Godin choose to profile the email strategy of a conservative Christian activist group like the American Family Association? And how can the budget-conscious nonprofit justify investing in a commercial email marketing program like ListManager?

    Budget-conscious? They have a budget of more than $11 million and 200 radio stations. Here is a good write-up from People For the American Way on this “family” association. Their California director wrote the infamous “Pink Swastika”, which tells us “homosexuals [are] the true inventors of Nazism and the guiding force behind many Nazi atrocities.”

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  • Carlos de Villasante

    I first encountered Carlos de Villasante’s work at a White Box benefit. Via artblog.net, I see he has just done a new mural in Miami.

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  • Wolfowitz at The New School

    James has posted an account of Wolfowitz’s appearance at The New School today as part of The New Yorker’s “cultural” festival.

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  • ATM Gallery / Wburg Third Friday

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    Hrafnhildur Arnardóttir, Left Brain

    On Friday we stopped by ATM Gallery on Avenue B for the opening of Hrafnhildur Arnardóttir. There was a bit more buzz than one usually sees at an East Village opening these days — Björk was there, supporting her fellow Icelander. She hung out in the gallery and on Avenue B for the entire time I was there, so she was probably there for most of the opening. I love NY! She can hang out like that without being accosted, which would be more likely to happen further uptown, or further west in Manhattan.

    Then we hopped on the L to go to Williamsburg to check out the Third Friday happenings. One thing about the Plus Ultra show — the cartoons by Will Self were surprisingly good.

    The highlights of the evening were to be found at Brooklyn Fire Proof and Open Ground. The former is morphing into a gallery space in addition to being artists studios. They showed some great work, and had a good band with videos and people dancing in costumes. They’re a little “at the edge” geographically, but that’s changing — witness the location of The Morning News party. I can’t find anything about her via Google, but there were some nice works on paper by Stine Hedegaard Andersen, and I got a chance to meet Steven Baines, whose work I had seen recently at White Columns.

    The other highlight was the (In)Security show at Open Ground. Approriately for a collaborative gallery space, they have a Wiki for a web site!

    One of the things from the show is available for download from the artist, Rebecca Ross‘s web site. It’s called “The Okay News” and is described thusly:

    The Okay News
    memory resident Mac OSX application

    A re-formed newspaper that runs in the background of everyday computer use. Every twenty minutes OkayNews delivers a headline from that day’s New York Times to an operating system warning box with the single button “Okay”, which must be pressed to continue using the computer.

    I think the “Third Friday” event was a big success. There were a lot of people at every gallery I visited, including neighborhood people that asked questions as if they didn’t normally go to galleries. As we walked around, we encountered quite a few people who were asking for directions, or asked where to get a copy of the gallery map.

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