"I think art is the thing that fixes culture, moment by moment." - Author Ottessa Moshfegh
Thursday, February 29, 2024
RIP Golden Richards and more
Wednesday, February 28, 2024
A short and fascinating history of the Caribbean through the eyes of the tremendously wordy James Michener
I’ve always been in awe of the writer - who I’m distantly related to through my mom’s dad’s sister’s husband Guy Michener - and the legendary amount of words he wrote. Without summing up the massive novel Caribbean, here are 10 really interesting things we should all know from the book, which was written in 1989. (Michener died on October 16, 1997). It should be noted that Michener mostly used historical facts to color the background of his stories of people, who he fictionalized.
- Technically, Florida and the Bahamas are not part of the Caribbean, but all the countries that border the sea in South and Central America are.
- Warriors from South America arrived on the islands in the 1300s and ended the long peace that had flourished with the Arawak people, who were skilled farmers and fishermen with an advanced social structure.
- These warriors were cannibals and often ate the men they captured and would steal the women for procreation. This goal of exterminating other types of people was happening all over the world at this time.
- These “Caribs” were not unlike the Spartans in Greece, and they believed eating the most powerful male enemies gave them particular skills and bravery in battle, while mating with the most beautiful women enhanced their own race for the future.
- Christopher Columbus accidentally landed in the Caribbean in 1492 and began a long campaign of European colonization and exploitation of gold and many other resources. Columbus and Spain introduced slaves from Africa there.
England's Sir Francis Drake became legendary for raiding Spanish ships and settlements and essentially entering the region into the golden age of pirates.James Michener - Barbados and other countries became major sources of sugar, which became a heavyweight economic driver, making many European colonists exceptionally wealthy through their morally and ethically corrupt explotation of slave labor.
- Later, the French would also swoop in and their colonization style contrasted in significant ways from the Spanish colonizers. Generally, while the Spanish were interested in wealth and power, the French - and also the British - wanted to build settlements and create trading networks.
- The Haitian Revolution was the first successful slave revolt and became the first Black-led country in the Western Hemisphere.
- During World War II, the islands would again become strategic spots for both the Allies and the Axis nations as locations where they all wanted to place their military warships and subs. Leading into modern times, the Caribbean countries continue to evolve their cultural identities as they all still struggle for freedom and self-determination. They are fascinating places far beyond their basic island sand-filled beauty.
Tuesday, February 27, 2024
Pop Culture Presidents: #3 Thomas Jefferson
He would be the first president in the new capital city, Washington, D.C. - a "mosquito-infested swamp with ... stumps still protruding" all down the main street, Pennsylvania Avenue.
Sex
This would probably be considered the "doozy" section when it comes to Jefferson. His wife, Martha Jefferson, had died way back in 1782, which means Thomas had been widowed for a long time before he took office. Being taller than even George Washington might have made him attractive to suiters; however, Jefferson negated some of that handsomeness by his often slouched way of sitting and his tendency to greet ambassadors in his "slippers and shirtsleeves." His wife had been described as pretty before dying from childbirth complications. The daughter they had would also die at the age of three.
It gets, believe it or not, far rougher here. Jefferson would take up with Sally Hemings, one of his slaves, who happened to be a half-sister of Martha's. Sally was the child a Martha's father and one of his own slaves. Back to Thomas, he had six children with Sally and maintained their relationship for decades. There is some debate as to whether this was a consensual relationship. But that's ridiculous because Jefferson owned her, which qualifies him as one of the few U.S. presidents who can qualify for the title rapist. Despite his own complicated relationship with slavery, Jefferson succeeded in getting Congress to ban the importation of slaves in 1807.
Drugs
Throughout his adult life, Jefferson spent lavishly on wine and beer, and even attempted to cultivate wine grapes at Monticello. But it doesn't appear he did drugs very much, at least until very late in his life when he acquired chronic diarrhea. Although those poops may have been the cause of his ultimate demise, he used laudanum to ease the pain. He noted in his letters that the drug had become a habit, and he appears to have had more success growing opium at Monticello than he had earlier with wine grapes.
Rock n' Roll
Jefferson loved playing music and listening to it, he liked to draw, and he was also a huge Shakespeare fan, but there isn't much other evidence that he was a true rock n' roll president. Unless you consider that he had one of his slaves apprentice with a top French chef, which resulted in Jefferson being able to claim that he introduced macaroni and cheese and french fries to the U.S.
Policy
Jefferson followed through as a governmental minimalist by writing, rather than presenting in person, his legislative proposals to Congress. He rarely appeared publicly - making only two speeches (his inaugurations) over eight years - other than on his horseback rides in D.C.’s Rock Creek Park.
His main goal was to eliminate the national debt, which he calculated he could do in seven years if the federal government operated on a budget of $2 million annually over that span. He even cut the city’s 130 federal employees by nearly half, partly as a way to "drain the swamp" of holdovers from opposition parties. His dream to eliminate the rest was stymied when Napoleon, in 1803, busy focusing on the Anglo-French War, sold the Louisiana Territory to the Union for $12 million. Jefferson recognized the possibilities of nearly doubling the country’s land mass. When his advisors told him it would take a constitutional amendment to proceed with such a large land deal, Jefferson decided to skip that process and cut the deal before Napoleon could withdraw the sale offer. This also meant that Jefferson's planned debt elimination would not happen, but the big blue skies of the west were calling. He got Lewis and Clark to begin their exploration even before the deal was done, which, even under the pretense of science and as "a literary pursuit," was illegal according to international law.
In other land-use news and accomplishments, in 1806, during the 8-year Jefferson presidency, Congress authorized the building of the first public road, from Cumberland, Maryland to Wheeling, West Virginia.
His second term was marred by the ongoing Anglo-French War, which caused troubles in the Caribbean and forced Jefferson to halt trade, giving the federal government a huge role in enforcing his Embargo Act - like the Louisiana Purchase, a contradiction to his limited-government principles - and severely crippling the economy.
See the rest of this series on Pop Culture Presidents.
Monday, February 26, 2024
Exploring our Hawaii obsession with comedian Sarah Vowell
It’s only two pages in before Vowell mentions the Brady Bunch, which I firmly believe gives the place a good bit of its allure, after the classic multipart series when the TV family visits Hawaii. What a tourism initiative that was! Vowell says the concrete high rises that starting springing up after 1959 give downtown Honolulu a “Very Brady brutalism.”
Hawaii really became what it is now when the 25th U.S. President William McKinley invaded Spanish-speaking colonies Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Philippines, and acquired Hawaii, mainly so they could all become bases for attacking other parts of the world when deemed necessary.
Hawaii, after having been annexed to the U.S. in 1898 became a state in 1959, even though there are still many native Hawaiians who think it’s ridiculous to call them Americans, as it kind of is.
Going back to 1776, Vowell details how Hawaiians killed British explorer Captain Cook, who had tried to kidnap the high chief, but not before Cook’s sailors spread venereal diseases left and right to the islanders.
From all this at the promising start of the book, Vowell veers down some arguably uninteresting and sidewinding paths on the early colonizing missionaries. That said, to the credit of and with the help of the missionaries, between 1822 and the end of their operations in 1863, the Hawaiian people … went from having no written language to 75 percent of all Hawaiians learning to read and write in the native language.” It had become one of the most literate places in the world.
Another element of this time had to do with the whale ships based out of New England and elsewhere that were killing thousands of whales for the many resources, including ship oil, that could be harbored from them. Luckily for the whales, they were able to not go completely extinct because “the whole world was about to go ape for fossil fuels” and the “Pennsylvania petroleum boom of the 1860s slowed down sperm whales’ extinction.” This wouldn’t hurt Hawaii’s economy much because sugar cane was filling the gaps.
I’ve only made it through the first half of Unfamiliar Fishes, but I’ll likely return to it because I’m intrigued to see what Vowell finds in Hawaii’s more modern history.
So far, I give the book 3.5 out of 5 stars.
Sunday, February 25, 2024
Liberty offers a nice semi-local ski option
It feels like a small miracle to get any skiing in nowadays with such noticeably short winters, but at least I’ve been to Copper Mountain in Colorado for five days, Whitetail also in Pennsylvania for one, now Liberty, and have another Copper trip planned in the coming weeks.
Liberty is just past the northern Maryland border in Pennsylvania and is typically packed on the front side with little tots learning to ski and all kinds of other people seemingly risking life and limb. I stay away from there but the kids like to ride the rails in the terrain park. There used to be a half pipe but it was difficult to cover it with main-made snow and wasn't open much, so it was removed.
On the back side, there are two fun double black diamonds and a good handful of moguls. It’s amazing to see the amount of people taking brutal falls on those. No wonder there was an army of ski patrol lining some of the runs. There seems to be far more crashes than out west, with people falling left and right. One girl took a total face plant into the snow next to me. That might be ok in Colorado, where the powder could even feel refreshing to the face, but not at Liberty with this harder snow.The East Coast resorts are definitely don't offer the same workout as ones in the Rockies. By comparison, the longest run is about a mile downhill at Liberty, with the longest one at Copper being three miles.
Also, Liberty's history is interesting. Itb was developed in the 1960s with big hopes to become a pretty massive destination. But it was bankrupt in the 1970s, purchased by a new owner and renamed Ski Liberty, which it remained until taking its current name in the 1990s. It has a 100+-room lodge and is a popular golfing spot in the summer, and it's now owned by Vail Resorts. The way the weather looks - warming up over the next couple of weeks - people may be golfing soon and not skiing much more at all this season.
It's a very close call, but I like Whitetail just a little more than Liberty. Either way, it's nice to have ski options within a couple hours from home.Friday, February 23, 2024
Learning some keytar songs for my local music collective
Hopefully nobody in my regular "Songs from a Hat" music collective sees this because we're supposed to arrive each time with a musical surprise, playing a song or a few songs from a category that we have previously selected. Tonight's category is "keytar," meaning songs that were played with a guitar-looking keyboard around someone in the band's neck. It's looking like "Don't You Want Me" from The Human League will be my spotlight number. I remember loving the boy-girl vocals and super-80s electro vibe all the way back to when it spent three weeks at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the summer of 1982.
- "Sister Christian" by Night Ranger. It's unbearably long at 4 minutes so maybe I'll find a way to do a three-minute version.
- "Sunglasses at Night" by Corey Hart. The toughest thing to learn about this song is getting Corey Hart's Night at the Roxbury head-pumping right. Watch the video for this one; it's hilarious. The song surprisingly climbed all the way to #7 in 1984. It's at the same time oddly surprising it didn't go to #1.
- A mellow version of "Jump" by Van Halen would be a good choice if it were more original, but what I've worked up sounds a lot like the Aztec Camera cover version. We'll see how the night goes. If it gets late and we've been drinking too much, this could be a good sing-along candidate.
- "Tempted" by Squeeze
- "Angie" by The Rolling Stones
- "Just What I Needed" by The Cars
- "Home Sweet Home" by Motley Crue
Thursday, February 22, 2024
MAD Magazine takes a look at classic TV sitcoms of the 1970s
Wednesday, February 21, 2024
Things Fall Apart details the agonizing road to being colonized in Nigeria
And it goes like this: Okonkwo was once a great wrestler, a tribal war hero, had three wives, and a barn full of yams, and could not tolerate lazy and debt-ridden men like his father, Unoka, who had died 10 years previously.
It is announced that a daughter from his town of Umuofia has been murdered in a nearby town. His town proclaims that the other town would have to either go to war or offer a young man and a virgin. They choose the latter: the young man's name is Ikemefuna and the virgin goes to the man who lost his murdered wife.
Ikemefuna joins Okonkwo's family of three wives and eight children. The father is mean to his new son, as he is to everyone, but he does love him. During the week of peace, he beats one of his wives for not being home to make his lunch one day. When the festive New Yam Festival arrives, he beats one of his wives for destroying a tree that was actually still very much alive.
After three years, Ikemefuna has integrated well into Okonkwo’s family, and his once-beaten and defeated younger brother Nwoye has been re-enlivened by his presence. But then an elder visits and tells the father that Ikemefuna will be taken into the woods the next day and sacrificed, as part of the deal that brought him to town in the first place. Okonkwo is the one assigned to kill him with a machete.
Meanwhile, in other vignettes (which this book consists of a lot of) Okonkwo serves on a panel of judges who make up rules about wives and kidnappings and also, a wedding ceremony takes place that includes lots of jostling for gifts of farm animals, one of which escapes from a gated area.
Okonkwo is later found to have caused the deaths of his adopted son (obviously) and one of his wives. Because of this, it is ruled that he must leave the village with his remaining family for seven years. Before they leave, members of his village - even his best friend - proceed to destroy his home and cows as an order from the gods to cleanse that area.
He arrives in his new village and is informed that he is not suffering as badly as he could. He could have been exiled for life, but instead he was exiled from the village where his father lived to the one where his mother was from.
A couple of years after he arrives at his new village, missionaries, including a white man on an iron horse (what we would call a "bicycle") visit and, although Okonkwo thinks they are insane, his first (and who he considers lazy) son Nwoye becomes hooked. The missionaries are given land in the Evil Forest and, when nothing bad happens to them, more villagers begin to go with them.
Before heading back to his former village, Okonkwo has friends rebuild his houses. As the missionaries secure more of his villagers, Okonkwo ends up killing a white man and subsequently hangs himself from a tree, an act considered to disgrace him further in the end. The lead colonizer ends the book by noting that Okonkwo’s story would make for a good paragraph in the how-to colonize book he is writing.
3.5 out of 5 stars
Tuesday, February 20, 2024
My 94 favorite albums of 2023
Taylor Swift |
Lil Yachty |
Lydia Loveless |
The Lemon Twigs |
Monday, February 19, 2024
Looking back at Curb Your Enthusiasm's Season 7 Seinfeld reunion
In Episode 1, Larry confronts the possibility of having to take care of his girlfriend who is diagnosed with cancer. The doctor says there won’t even be any time for golf in his schedule, which leads Larry to brainstorm ways to get out of the relationship. When Larry bumps into the doctor and his boyfriend at a party, Larry is taken aback by the doctor being gay and tells the boyfriend, “You seem slightly gay." Then there’s guest star Catherine O’Hara playing Bam Bam, his friend Funkhouser’s sister, who has just been released from an asylum, has sex with Larry's best friend Jeff, and then goes around singing “I love the fat boy” around Jeff’s wife. This episode really sets the scene for the season when Larry bumps into his ex-wife Cheryl, sparks rekindle a bit, and she says she misses him and could maybe handle “three hours of Larry” per day like back when he was working on Seinfeld and wasn’t home with her all day. 5 out of 5 stars
In Episode 2, it takes a running gag about blow jobs in cars to finally end Larry’s relationship with his cancer-stricken girlfriend, played likeably by Vivica A. Fox. The fact that she is so likeable makes Larry’s game to end the relationship over her cancer all the more despicable. 4 out of 5 stars.
In Episode 3, “tippers are solo” is one of the classic lines as Larry proposes a Seinfeld reunion for all the wrong reasons - mainly so he can offer the role of George's ex-wife to Cheryl in order to win her back. It seems very unclear whether the reunion will happen after Larry tells off the head of NBC for giving him cruddy Lakers’ tickets. Along with the Seinfeld gang, Meg Ryan guest stars as - uh oh - George’s potential TV ex-wife. 5 out of 5 stars.
Episode 4 sees Larry going to Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen’s anniversary party. He tells Christian Slater that he's taking too much caviar then interrupts Jeff’s daughter’s gift to Ted and Mary of a serenade of “You’re Just Too Good to Be True." His bad karma builds up - including for criticizing a man on a plane for wearing shorts - and he gets beaten up for dating a woman with a boyfriend. 4.5 out of 5 stars.
In Episode 5, Larry stumbled into dating a woman in a wheelchair named Denise, gets in fights with Rosie O’Donnell, and ends up having Denise and another woman in a wheelchair chasing him around a friend’s sophisticated party. Not as many laughs as usual but the depths Larry goes to are spellbinding. 4 out of 5 stars
Episode 6 sees Larry deciding to fire Jerry Seinfeld’s assistant because the midriff shirts she wears show too much of her flabby belly. But Julia Louis-Dreyfus says he has to hire her back because the woman’s mom is suicidal. That mom is the hilariously wacky highlight of this episode, which almost sees the mom/daughter duo heading out for a cross-country tour to spread the Jesus gospel. Instead, Larry is the one they save, with the help of the woman’s afore-mentioned love handles. 4.5 out of 5 stars.
Episode 7 is my least favorite of the season. Larry kills a black swan that is possibly attacking him on the golf course, which leads to his gang being nearly kicked out of the club. As usual, there are a handful of belly laughs, but this one is inessential. 3 out of 5 stars.
Episode 8 brings Larry to Banana Republic, where a fire drill sends him outside without his own pants, instead he's wearing unpurchased ones he was trying on and still have the security tags. This is mixed with a storyline in which Jeff’s wife finds women’s panties in Jeff’s glovebox. So Jeff convinces Larry to tell her that they’re his and he likes to wear women’s panties. It’s a funny episode and even includes Larry yelling at kids selling lemonade that he doesn’t like. 4.5 out of 5 stars
Episode 9 features the classic line “how’s her p—sy?" Cheryl by now has won the part of George’s ex-wife and the Seinfeld reunion table read happens. George’s pen troubles with Larry and Larry’s troubles with a nine-year-old daughter of one of his crew lead the funny storylines, with Kramer’s disease and his play off Michael Richards’ real-life race troubles don’t work as well. 4.5 out of 5 stars.
Episode 10 More memorable lines cascade out of this episode, including “busy with your beans” and “do you respect wood?” While Larry gets very close to possibly getting Cheryl back, the Seinfeld reunion ends magically (unlike the end of the original show, which many people didn't like). This one is a must-watch as a landmark in both Curb and Seinfeld’s histories, at the very least. 5 out of 5 stars.
Saturday, February 17, 2024
“Rat” leads the batch of evil tales from Stephen King’s If It Bleeds
When Drew reaches his destination, a podunk Maine town, and stops to get gas at the general store. The old cashier tells him the caretaker of Drew’s cabin had shot himself in the head there. When he arrives at the cabin, he has a scary run-in with a momma moose as he exits his car. When he talks to Lucy on the phone, he doesn’t mention the moose or that Old Bill blew his head off at the cabin. Before turning in for his first night, he reacquaints himself with the items in the cabin, like a Stretch Armstrong doll and several other toys that must have been left by renters over the years.
Drew tears through lots of writing in the first three days, so much so that he doesn’t even realize he’s begun sneezing a lot and isn’t eating anything fresh or healthy. He learns that the old cashier’s daughter has taken over the store with her dad in the hospital for pneumonia. And she says a major snow storm is coming in that will barricade Drew in his cabin. Lucy calls him later and tries to talk him into coming home.
But when he awakes, the rat is not dead. In fact, the rat is speaking, using Jonathan Franzen’s words to explain why Drew is a failed novelist, like so many other “wannabe novelists.” The rat then says he’ll make his wish of writing the book come true in exchange for one person Drew loves dying. This reminds him of his recent call with Lucy in which she said he was choosing his novel over his family. But the rat says he was thinking Al Stamper would be a good choice, since his university colleague had recently told Drew ha had early-stage pancreatic cancer. Drew agreed.
He goes back to work and does a good job on the book. The weather breaks and Jackie Colson is chainsawing trees that have fallen on the road back to town, called Shithouse Road, thanks to Lucy calling him to do so. Drew is able to get out and make it home, but he feels like the rat has followed him.
Lucy and Al think the book is great and sellable. And, oddly, Al’s cancer has seemingly gone away. Drew figures his rat episode was just a dream. The day the novel goes to auction and sells for $350,000, Al dies, and so does Nadine Stamper, both of them wiped out by a semi on the highway in the snow on the way to a cancer test. Drew vomits into the sink.
The next fall, he returns to the cabin so he can prepare to sell the pace. He has no plans to start writing in it again, or writing anywhere again, although he has not shared this information. Drew wakes in the middle of the night with the rat on his chest. The rat told him he didn’t break their deal in any way by having Nadine die too and that he, not Drew, had finished the novel. Drew jumps to try to kill him but the rat gets away into the walls. He returns home and tells himself he will gladly join the ranks of one-book writers and that at least his family will be alright.
Friday, February 16, 2024
Jon Stewart proved he could play in the same league as Steve Martin and Woody Allen
Breakfast at Kennedys imagines what would happen if the Jewish narrator went to the Kennedy compound, which ends up being a strange mishmash of the Kennedy compound, a concentration camp, and a carnival. Seems Stewart is just getting warmed up on this wacky tale. 4 out of 5 stars.
A Very Hanson Christmas, 1996-1999 details the letters of the Hanson band's mom, who shifts radically from being a loving Christian into an anti-abortion mama to a schizophrenic with a fear of all things in the world. The glimpse into 1990s superstardom in Oklahoma is a highlight of the collection. 4.5 out of 5 stars.
While many of the tapes were "recorded over with Grateful Dead bootlegs," Lack of Power: The Ford Tapes presents a look into the bumbling Gerald Ford presidency. 4 out of 5 stars.
Martha Stewart’s Vagina starts out really funny as a take on keeping care of one’s private parts. But the second half goes a little too far as the essay suggest setting up an office in one’s vagina as a real possibility. 3 out of 5 stars.
The New Judaism is a great light-hearted review of the differences between Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform Judaism and the direction the the religion should go if it has learned from history. 4.5 out of 5 stars.
Pen Pals is the best story in the collection, offering the correspondence between Mother Theresa and a very obnoxious Princess Diana. 5 out of 5 stars.
Local News is a brief report on the Taco Bell chihuahua being killed in a bar fight. Minor at best. 3.5 out of 5 stars.
The Last Supper is a reimagining of Jesus and his frat pals getting a last meal in at a place called Jerry’s, except the employees aren't too keen on helping them very quickly. Pretty hilarious stuff. Jesus in this story, he’s, well, alright. Hilarious stuff. 5 out of 5 stars.
Things get a little forgettable in the middle of the collection. Da Vinci: The Lost Notebook and The Cult are filler.
Five Under Five is an amusing take on the increasingly silly lists of people - whether they are 40 under 40 senior aides or 60 over 60 parking attendants - that nearly every magazine and website seem to regularly feature, especially back when magazines were still a thing. 4 out of 5 stars.
The Devil and William Gates is a sci-fi tale told from many generations in the future, in a look back at an incident in 1975 that happened to the future and now former World CEO. At that time, Gates sold his soul to the devil, but when he comes to collect 25 years later, Gates defeats the Devil with a small loophole and the world carries on. 2.5 out of 5 stars.
Thursday, February 15, 2024
RIP William "Pop-Tarts" Post
I have to admit these are one of my favorite things in the world to eat. They have 60 flavors now, after starting out with just four: strawberry, blueberry, brown sugar cinnamon, and apple-currant. Heat them up in the toaster oven and spread a little butter on top to make it even more disgustingly delicious. That said, I almost never eat them these days because, whenever I do, I get a brief and minor case of the queasies.
According to the New York Times, Post "led the bakery plant that developed the first Pop-Tarts for Kellogg’s in 1964." He developed the product in just two weeks, with the help of his own kids as taste testers. When they gave the experiment the thumb's up, Post ignored the advice of many others who said it was not a good idea.
Pop-Tarts were going to be called fruit scones but a Kellogg’s executive riffed off the Pop Art movement of the time to coin the related name. Post also had the idea later in the 1960s to brilliantly add frosting on top. There's nothing worse than a frosting-less Pop-Tart. Those should never be on store shelves! That said, there was some concern that the frosting would melt in the toaster. I've always wondered why that doesn't happen. Perhaps best not to know!
Pop-Tarts continues to sell in massive amounts and the product stays very relevant on the pop-culture landscape. Look out later this year for the movie called Unfrosted: The Pop-Tart Story, directed by Jerry Seinfeld, and this Saturday Night Live skit shows just how darn distracting it can be to have a box of Pop-Tarts in front of you:
Wednesday, February 14, 2024
How Alfred Hitchcock's childhood and murderous interests shaped his movies
Early on, in the Introduction, White doesn’t really reveal anything fans don’t know about the man who made an impressive 54 films. Hitch obviously had many contradictions, so the argument is presented that at least 12 of his personas are needed to explore in order to understand the full person. The parts I probably know the least about are the first two: about his childhood and why White refers to him as “the murderer.” Here’s what I learned in those two sections:
- Hitchcock himself articulated most of what is known about his childhood, mainly that he was a mostly solitary but not unhappy child. One oft-told story about the origin of his anxiety was how his father sent him to a police station with a note when Alfred was about five years old and they locked him in jail for a while.
- His films were heavily influenced by the long-forgotten authors he loved as a boy, and also Edgar Allan Poe.
- Hitch didn’t treat children as children, both in his movies and at home. But both adults and children loved him, especially with his TV series Alfred Hitchcock Presents and his Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine.
- Psycho, The Birds, and Marnie, in particular, deal with repressed childhood memories and may have become more interesting stories to him after a series of health scares possibly led him to think more about his own immortality.
- Hitch never much talked about his own childhood traumas. But his father died of emphysema when he was 15 and the war soon began with about six years of trouble, as German bombs rained down on London., often very close to his home. The Spanish flu showed up for the last year of the war.
- Moving from childhood, the next “life” of the director is as the murderer.
- Many critics initially trashed Psycho, dismissing it as gratuitous violence. But it was an immediate smash hit with audiences, making tons of money at the box office despite its small budget (the studio didn’t have any faith in it either).
- Hitch didn’t want to actually be a 9-to5-type serial killer, but “violence and cruelty spurred his creativity.” His fascination with famous serial killers led him to often give books and materials about them to his writers and actors.
- His stories of murder weren’t about the victims but rather about male destructiveness, lashing out at women, other men, the government, or civilization as a whole. He said the best murderers regard their actions as a fine art, and he zoned in on that idea.
- Capturing evil at its utmost came in the form of his hiring to lead a film documenting Holocaust concentration camp atrocities. Night Will Fall (5 out of 5 stars) was not released until 2014, but it truly captures those unimaginable days in Europe, often with long shots, not panning away, from images like the piles of clothes of the dead and the "shower heads" in the gas chambers that were much like the notorious one in Psycho.
5 out of 5 stars
Tuesday, February 13, 2024
Paradise comes in waves as beach resorts come in and out of style
Prototypical gorgeous beach resort |
Take Nicaragua, Nobody ever visited there as a tourist because, from 1937 to 1979, it was led by a series of dictators. Daniel Ortega became the leader in the 1980s but those dictators didn’t just go away. They became the U.S.-backed Contras and civil war unfolded. So it took many more years before the Central America's gorgeous beaches gave way to opening as the locale of hotels and resorts. Then it stook still more years for Nicaraguans to understand the ways of customer service. Ortega recently came back into office and proceeded to raise taxes, sparking protests and deadly crackdowns followed by a bad bungling of the Covid crisis. It appears Nicaragua’s tourism surge may have unfortunately been short-lived.
The beautiful beaches and great surfing of Senegal, on Africa’s western-most side, have a different story. People don’t think to go there because they figure it’s so far away. But really, the country is a seven-hour direct flight from New York City. So an even bigger factor in Senegal's struggle to become a tourism destination may be the cost of the flight, which is typically about double the cost of flights from the U.S. to Europe.
Actually, Senegal was the top tourism country in sub-Saharan Africa alongside Kenya up until the 1980s, but a separatist movement and then a president who deprioritized tourism has left a once-glowing Club Med and other properties to pretty much crumble. Another need that’s been identified is for Senegal to become knowledgeable about marketing itself as a tourist destination. Not only does a potential workforce not yet have the fundamentals of customer service once the crowd would arrive, but the country’s tourism marketing infrastructure (including a pretty inactive government agency of tourism promotion) has yet to be established. Other problems with going to Senegal include the costly and unreliable forms of traveling once in the country, the lack of online services for things like travel booking, and the high costs of good things like cheese that have to be imported from places like France.
In Stodola's section about Tulum, Ibiza, and Cancun, she laments the places that have lost their paradise status. Starting in the 1980s, a flood of travelers began descending on Tulum, south of Cancun on the east side of Mexico, for its fine white sand beaches and “water of a color that writers have long strained to describe fittingly.” Tourism there began as lodging in grass huts with a hammock for sleeping at the low rate of $10 per night. Daytrippers would visit the nearby Mayan ruins. In 2003, an Argentinian model opened Coqui Coqui - no longer in business - and the New York fashion industry made Tulum a major destination. Now you might spend $50 for some nachos and guacamole.
One of the many consequences of massive growth and development is that wastewater is taken from the resorts and dumped in the jungle, creating a groundwater that spreads disease far and wide through the vast river system in the area. Instead of relying on the latest advances, 1950s technology is being recreated there, the engineers are not learning from history and even much of the marketing hails Tulum as super eco-friendly. Waste could be turned into a sellable commodity, such as energy, if it was concentrated and contained, but instead it is being dumped into the ocean and other waterways.
At party beach resorts, like most of the ones in Ibiza, people are looking for ecstasy over paradise, and much of the action takes place indoors in the clubs rather than out on the beaches, which are mainly relegated to daytime-hangover spots. These Ibiza nightclubs were launched in the 1970s as a direct reaction to Club Meds heading the family route. Debauchery continues apace in infamous foam, paint, and suds parties.
While Ibiza and other scenes were first forming for Europe’s youthful parties, “middle-class teens with disposable income came of age” in the U.S. in the 1960s and headed to Fort Lauderdale. In the 1980s that changed to Daytona Beach, with help from MTV. Once the U.S. coasts filled up, inspired by that new cable station's airing of the debauchery happening down in Florida, kids started looking further afield to places like Cancun.
Club Med |
Sunday, February 11, 2024
My 13 favorite recent bourbon cocktail recommendations
Betty Carter |
The 19th Century was actually not invented until 2016 but is a new take on the New York sour family of cocktails.
- 1 and 1/2 parts bourbon
- 3/4 parts white Creme de cacao liqueur
- 3/4 parts sweet vermouth (or Lillet Rouge)
- 3/4 parts lemon juice
- Garnish with lemon twist
I already wrote about a batch of yummy banana cocktails, but I didn't mention the Banana Bread Old Fashioned, which - assuming you like bananas - might be the MVP of this family.
- 4 dashes of black walnut bitters and a little simple syrup at the bottom of shaker
- 2 and 1/2 parts bourbon
- 3/4 parts banana liqueur
The Last Word |
- 1 and 1/2 parts bourbon
- 3/4 parts sherry
- 1/2 parts lucano amaro (gor subs are Campari 0 if you prefer bitter - or Aperol - if you prefer sweeter)
- 3/4 parts lemon juice
- 3 drops of saline solution (which is typically 4 parts water and 1 part sea salt)
- Garnish with a lemon twist
The Bourbon Gold Smash is a honeyed take on the more fruity Bourbon Smash.
- 2 parts bourbon
- 1 part honey syrup
- 1 part fresh lime juice
I really love the Chocolate Boulevardier. Some people don't like vermouth, but I've begun to find it essential in many, many great cocktails. That's saying quite a bit because I'm not much of a wine drinker and vermouth is basically a sweeter version of crushed grapes.
- 1 1/4 parts bourbon
- 3/4 parts sweet vermouth
- 3/4 parts campari
- 3-4 dashes of chocolate bitters
- Garnish with an orange peel
UInbelievably not created until 2006, the Elderflower Manhattan basically subs sweet versouth in a Manhattan with elderflower liquer, which is a great replacement in a bunch of classic drinks.
- 2 parts bourbon
- 1 part elderflower
- 1/2 parts dry vermouth
- 2 dashes angostura bitters
- Garnish with a cherry
The Expat is one of my favorite drinks to make if needed quickly!
- 2 parts bourbon
- 2 dashes of angostura bitters
- 3/4 parts fresh lime juice\
- 3/4 parts simple syrup
The Gold Rush |
- 1 part bourbon
- 2/3 parts ginger liqueur
- 1/4 parts fresh lemon juice
- 1/5 parts fresh lime juice
- 1/5 parts honey syrup (3 part honey, 1 part water)
- 3 drops of saline solution
- Garnish with a cherry
It's not so easy to get chartreuse these days, as the monks who make it have scaled back on production as the drink becomes more popular. The last bottle of yellow chartreuse I bought (luckily a bottle goes a long way) was $70 but that last I checked it had gone up to $100. But once you try chartreuse, it it tough to ever go back to not having it in your collection. The Last Word Variation is what I call my own twist because The Last Word uses green chartreuse and I have been using yellow. This is a cult cocktail that people long for a very good, tangy reason.
- 1 part bourbon
- 3/4 parts of fresh lime juice
- 3/4 parts yellow chartreuse
- Garnish with a cherry (sometimes I pour a tiny bit of cherry concentrate in)
- Garnish with a lime
La Valencia is another flavorful one that I've made for various groups with resounding thumbs-ups. Yellow chartreuse makes another appearance.
- 1 part whiskey
- 1 and 1/2 parts manzanilla sherry (can substitute with dry vermouth)
- 1/2 parts yellow chartreuse
- 3/4 parts fresh lemon juice
- 1/2 parts simple syrup
- 1 dash of angostura bitters
The Oleo Sacrament leans on a plum and floral feel. I've also made this for groups that loved it.
- 1 and 2/3 parts bourbon
- 1/2 parts lime oleo saccharum (which is essentially simple syrup with lime)
- 1/3 parts Benedictine DOM (or Braulio is a great substitute)
- 2 dashes of Peychauds bitters
- 2 dashes of plum bitters
- Garnish with a lemon zest twist
The Paper Plane is a famous pink drink that is also a variation of The Last Word. It's lemony and zesty and was created in 2007.
- 3/4 parts bourbon
- 3/4 parts Aperol
- 3/4 parts Amaro Nonino Quintessentia (or Angostura bitters and sweet vermouth)
- 3/4 parts fresh lemon juice
And finally, for peach lovers, it's tough to beat The Royalist.
- 1 and 1/2 parts dry vermouth
- 1 part bourbon
- 3/4 parts Benedictine DOM
- 1 dash of peach bitters
- Garnish with a peach slice