I’m not sure if I’m even a big-D Democrat anymore, but I just signed the world’s shortest petition — “Terry, you’re fired!” — at AngryDems.com.
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Angry Dems
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Categories: Politics -
John Cage: Credo in Us
Yes, it’s 11MB, but it’s worth it! This work from 1942 was composed for Merce Cunningham (Cage’s partner until the end of his life). People like Cage and Cunningham created the NYC that we love, as opposed to the parts we don’t. Imagine “sampling” a Shostokovich symphony in a composition for dance during WWII!
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Categories: Music -
Burritoville, West 23rd, 3:30pm
Geeky gay boys, sitting alone at tables with their burritos, cruising the other geeky gay boys. Teenage girls from the Fashion Industries High School, sketching new fashions. Skinny straight boys with Central Park Conservancy t-shirts.
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Categories: NYC -
Quote from Mencken
Question: If you find so much that is unworthy of reverence in the United States, why do you live here?
Answer: Why do men go to zoos?
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Categories: General -
Not much to be said – yesterday sucked
A party that will not criticize the incumbent president cannot defeat him, now or two years from now. A party that has nothing to say about unfair tax breaks, a vanishing surplus and a looted economy cannot expect anyone to listen when it asks for votes. A party without passion or vision is hardly a political party at all. Even in their righteous defense of Social Security, Democrats too often sounded as if their chief concern was to preserve their own institutional position. Today the future looks grim for them because they blurred the purposes of their partisanship.


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Categories: Politics -
Far from Heaven
I haven’t looked at any election news yet, having finished dinner after attending a preview screening of Far From Heaven, the new Todd Haynes film. It’s set in 1958, and is like a neo-Douglas Sirk film.
Like Safe, his previous film, this one has me thinking about whether I really liked it. (I eventually decided Safe was brilliant, even though it’s an excrutiating movie to sit through.)
The film pulls off the whole 50s claustrophobic suburban environment very well, to the point that I was squirming in my seat. I didn’t even grow up in that world, unlike James.
In the end I think it works, but it is very melodramatic and heavy-handed in a weepy movie kind of way. The plot involves a suburban housewife (brilliantly played by Julianne Moore), whose life starts to fall apart when she catches her husband (played by Dennis Quaid) with another man. As he struggles with being homosexual, and goes to a psychiatrist, she starts to fall in love with her African-American gardener. Having grown up in the South, I found the latter story totally believable, and incredibly disturbing. In a way, I could imagine a gay white man in that world finding a way to live a decent life more easily than I could a white woman who loved a black man. James found the racism in the film rather heavy-handed, and he found it hard to believe that the North would be that bad in this era based on his experiences in Michigan and New England. As I said, having grown up in the South a generation later, I find the whole thing quite believable. If any of you reading this have an opinion on late 1950s Connecticut or New England, I would love for you to add a comment to this post.
One of the most amazing scenes in the film is when the husband and wife try to have a conversation after she has caught him in his office kissing another man. They talk around each other, not quite forming sentences, and their voices become hoarse with the strain. It’s a brilliant piece of film-making. (I realize I’m using brilliant too much here.)
I think it’s worth seeing, but in a way I find it a bit indulgent for a filmmaker to try to recreate a 50s film, but add the racial and sexual twists. The score is over the top, like a 50s film, but it seems ironic rather than sincere in our era. The audience — an odd mix of New Festival members, women-in-film organizations, and random elderly ladies from the Upper West Side with tickets through Equity — laughed at odd times, because the dialog seems so “knowing” to a modern audience.
One of the amusing lines in the film, where they talk about how “radical” Julianne Moore’s character is, has one of the women she went to college with talking about her doing summer stock with “steamy Jewish boys”.
The only celebrities I spotted in the audience were Christine Vachon (the producer) and John Cameron Mitchell.
George Clooney is listed as one of the executive producers. Maybe he really is gay.
One quibble with Dennis Quaid. He’s hot, but a 50s sales exec would not have a six-pack like that. I give him points though for being believable as a married man struggling with his sexuality — and he is shown kissing a man, unlike Tom Hanks who wouldn’t be shown kissing Antonio Banderas in Philadelphia. I hated the whole vibe of “I’m not really gay, just playing gay” in that film.
Another fabulous actress in this is Patricia Clarkson, playing the best friend of Julianne Moore’s character. I’ve seen her a few times on stage, especially in Nicky Silver plays.
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I see from IMDB that there is a film before Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story, which I do have, called Assassins: A Film Concerning Rimbaud. If any of you out there know how to get a copy of it, let me know.
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Categories: Culture -
Yikes! Who’s in charge here?
From the London Times:
Attack Iran the day Iraq war ends, demands Sharon
ISRAELÂ’S Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has called on the international community to target Iran as soon as the imminent conflict with Iraq is complete.
In an interview with The Times , Mr Sharon insisted that Tehran — one of the “axis of evil” powers identified by President Bush — should be put under pressure “the day after” action against Baghdad ends because of its role as a “centre of world terror”.
Britain’s Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, responds.
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Categories: Middle East -
Gaze in the Military
A beautiful post from David Ehrenstein. Don’t forget to check the Whoopie Box.
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Categories: Queer -
Nina Hagen at the Gershwin tonight!
I already have plans to go to a preview screening of Far From Heaven, the new Todd Haynes film, otherwise I would go see Nina Hagen for $8 at the Gershwin Hotel.
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Categories: Culture -
Go, Cornell!
This post is in honor of Chris:
Many students feel it would be helpful for Gannett to have vibrators available because Cornell is located in Ithaca, not a major city.
“At this point, you either go online or go downtown to the sort of scary and not very woman-affirming place sex-shop downtown,” Frazer said.
Some students agreed that access is important.
“I’m sure there are people who are dying to find vibrators and they don’t know where to go, so Gannett, go ahead,” Keith Hermanstyne ’04 said.
Others took a more practical approach.
“I think one of the most important things is for women to be able to get themselves off. It’s better than going to the sketchy shop downtown where they have to check the batteries for you,” Sara Jacobs ’05 said.
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Categories: General