Tuesday, May 09, 2006

The Amazing Pumpkini


Remember, its not real journalism. It’s just an illusion.

It was a shabbily constructed weekend.

Assorted allergies ganged up on me, plus I’m becalmed in the Horse Latitudes of Finals here there and everywhere. Also I was the designated consoler and Chief Executive Listener for a friend who is freshly divorced. Nice guy, old pal, and about where I was a few years ago so I struggled manfully to not blurt out one of my own, battle-tested Theories Of Dating.

(Namely that if you have a conscience and are concerned about anything beyond finding a place to bunk your dick it’s a grim slog. Now if you are a conscience-free [not evil, mind you: just, as Billie Holliday used to say, “Don’t-Carish”. Sorta the lassie-faire school of getting laid] and are cool with transience, life can be good.

If not, it can be one long fucking retreat from Moscow. )

Instead I mostly listened.

So toss in a kind of pre-existing, structural exhaustion from work (still grateful I have employment, and still profoundly grateful it doesn’t involve getting shot at or stoop labor or taking an elevator a mile into the earth to start my day) and a particular flavor melancholy that visits me from time to time like a poor relation, and putting words together into well-turned rows has become like puddling iron into loose potting soil for the last few weeks.

The product comes out a lumpy, spongy, mutant grandchild of what I had intended: paragraphs from my brain temporarily packing in cosmoline that are chinked bluntly together out of third-best and next-best words that let the wind whistle through and the rain bluster in and soak the carpets.

It’ll pass – it always does – but it’s a damned nuisance when it happens.

And also has nothing whatsoever to do with why I didn’t watch David Blaine or the Kentucky Derby this weekend.

Now understand, I like magic.

And other than that one time when I was, well, “thrown” from a horse is both overly dramatic and factually incorrect. More like I fell out of sync with the critter and bounced right down his back and off his ass. But other than the unpleasantness of cactus needling, sore ass and the fact that it happened in front of my family, I like horses very much.

But I also like it when the hot dog is at-least-as-big-as-and-preferably-bigger-than the bun, and to get to Blaine’s trick or “And they’re off…”, you had to chew though a lot of dull, white bread.

And that’s boring.

I don’t bore easily, but unless you’re disappearing an Atlas rocket, lit, in the gantry, a magic trick should take a few minutes -- tops – and a magic show should be a series of tricks. So unless the “trick” was to get ABC to hand over two hours of airtime (Coulda re-run The Great Colbertini’s act -- making twenty-feet of reinforced Presidential Teflon vanish in front of 2,200 people -- 7-8 times in that interval, so there you go) the Blaine thingy was a bloated waste.

Ditto the Derby, writ slightly smaller. It starts, they run, and in two minutes we have a winn-ah! Unless you’re at a Derby Party, everything else is incidental music.

(Ditto NASCAR, IMO, but in the other direction. 400 miles of left turns? Interspersed with the occasional explosion?

OK, and then what?

You mean, that's it?

Maybe racing was a different beast when it was auto company against auto company and track innovations might make their way into next year’s model. When fuel was cheap and forever, and there was some relationship – however tenuous – between your beater and the cars down on the oval.

But now millionaire hillbillies race multi-million dollar spacecraft ‘round and ‘round, and Gatorade apparently uses astronaut testing facilities to design new, space-age sports-drink-nipple-“delivery systems” so that said millionaire hillbillies can have a simultaneous suck off of the corporate and electrolyte teats without taking their hand off of 10 and 2.)

Anyway, here’s the NYT on Blaine. It contains a Sekrit Coded Message for all Moonbats out there.
See if you can find it…

May 9, 2006
TV REVIEW
Thinking Up, and Overthinking, Stunts
By GINIA BELLAFANTE
The title exuded a certain pessimism: "David Blaine: Drowned Alive." On a live television special last night, Mr. Blaine, the obscurity-averse practitioner of spectacle, ended a weeklong submersion in 2,000 gallons of 96-degree saltwater, providing as the finale an attempt to break through chains while holding his breath for nine minutes. Would he survive, or would the world, as he put it in an interview before diving in, "see something pretty insane?"

Mr. Blaine, who had set up his human aquarium outside Lincoln Center, did not drown alive. Nor did he set the world record for holding his breath, as he had hoped — a record set at 8 minutes and 58 seconds. Instead, he emerged from the tank, requiring oxygen after 7 minutes and 8 seconds, and told the crowd that had gathered that he had had a difficult week and that "I love you all."

This, of course, was not the desired outcome for someone whose preparation included training with the Navy Seals and losing 40 pounds to decrease his body mass and make breathlessness easier. Yet, the absurd seriousness with which Mr. Blaine approaches his public stunts leaves you with a certain glee at his failure.
It is a sign of the pumped-up intensity around his whole enterprise that "David Blaine: Drowned Alive" commanded two hours on ABC.


In dreamy montages last night, Mr. Blaine explained that these exercises are all part of his "journey," that they "make people think." Magic, he said, "brings people together who might not come together." Well, so does the airport.

The beauty of old-school thrill seekers like Evel Knievel, whose interview with Mr. Blaine ran during the show, is that they did not seek to intellectualize their gamesmanship.

When Mr. Blaine looks for insight into why he does what he does, Mr. Knievel responds without any effort at introspection: "You're a daredevil," he says. "You can't help it."


See, more often than not, simplicity carries the day.

Not simple-mindedness -- I guarantee you that Evel Knievel didn’t just jump on a bike and roar into his stunts without a lot of care and prep -- but simplicity.

A clarity of purpose. An “I will now make quarters shoot out of your nose” straightforwardness that tells the audience exactly why they are about to see, and why they should care.

Colbert had it when he put on his Big Giant O’Reilly Head, sank his teeth into Dubya’s leg, and would not let go.

Richard Feynman had it when he used a naught but a nipple-clamp (OK, it was a C-clamp, but you wanna wager which'll get a student’s attention quicker?) and a glass of ice water to blow those NASA flaks who were trying to run a fast, rocket-science ramadoola on the simple truth about why the Challenger blew up completely out of the room .

Murtha did it. Cronkite did it. Gandi and Groucho both did it, each in his own domain.

Hell, Reagan did it when he demanded the Berlin Wall be torn down.

Its telling the simple truth or asking the simple question that flummoxes your opponent.

Keeping it clean and clear and persisting until the other guy has to run away, kill your mike, admit they were full of shit, or Rove it up -- start ranting out more lies and calling you nasty names for daring to ask such questions in the first place.

And Roving it up doesn't work so good anymore.

The trick is, don’t be distracted. Like stage magic, never take the hand that is offered and never look where your eye is being drawn.

So take, for example, Fat Tim and his Sunday Puppet show.

He let ambulatory shitsack Tom Delay burble his verbal rat poison and Wingnut stool softener virtually unchecked and unchallenged. Ah but when Howard Dean came on? Nancy Pelosi? Suddenly Timmuh decides to leap into action and get confrontational as he strives mightily to make this about Raising Taxes.

You gonna raise taxes. Huh? Are ya? Are ya? Huh?

Then Timmuh strives mightily to make this about Impeachment.

You gonna Impeach. Huh? Are ya? Are ya? Huh?

Then Timmuh positively outdoes himself in his chosen field of conspicuously covering fake news and non-issues by “interviewing” Steve Fucking Bridges. Senor Fake Bush. He stiff-arms his panel and D&Cing the subderma beneath the bottom of the Mouse Circus barrel, actually devotes the kind of time to a Rich Little he would ordinarily give a head of state or Nobel Laureate or activist billionaires.

Fat Tim: How aware are you are a comedian of that line you can’t cross with the Preznit.

Fake Bush: I don’t wanna be mean.

Holy shit. It just went on and on and on. I guess we can expect Punkin’ Haid to cede the next 15 minutes to Steve Colbert?

Waiting. Waiting. Crickets. Sun whipping around the sky “Time Machine” style. Waiting.

No?

(Colbert is, these days, nowhere mentioned but everywhere present. From the yawning non-mention on Sunday, to Richard Cohen actually going out of his way to re-pick a fight with bloggers about how mean they are and how Cohen Knows Funny! Oh, God bless these flapjawed simpletons for keeping Mr. Colbert firmly seated like the Ghost of Banquo at the table, and reminding us again that he does not simply ring the political doorbell at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, leave burning bags of dog poo on the stoop and run.

No he rolls his hibachi into the White House mess and prepares individual servings of burning poo at their tables, Benihana style.)

Dean was good and Pelosi was good because they saw Tim for what he was and always has been. A Power Groupie. A bit of Republican eye-sparkle feigning journalism, willing to blow in the whatever direction the breeze prevails.

Jane Hamsher posting at Huffington has what sounds like a very plausible explanation for why Punkin’ Haid is so grievous and nekkid in his sins, but I like a remedy that she implies into her final paragraph even more:
The next time Russert and Matthews start piddling in their sneakers at the thought of Democrats with subpoena power, I think it's time to remember that it's not even their beloved Republicans they fear for, and given their ecstatic participation in the Cliniton hunt it sure isn't the public interest. Could it be their own large, pale posteriors that fear exposure? Is that why they're working overtime to perpetuate GOP narratives and attempting to spread their own personal fears into the hearts of their viewers at the specter of Congressional oversight?


Seriously, he nearly peed himself at the suggestion that Democrats might want to do what Republicans refuse to do: investigate high crimes, corruption and incompetence and then bring to book those that are to blame.

And the solvent for that kind of lard is not to overthink it.

Don’t follow the offered brightly-colored scarves, or gett dazzled by the flashbang pyrotechnics. The solution is to keep it keep it simple and clear and remember that Russert (for example) is, for all intents and purposes, a White House operative who occasionally gets bent and cranky over side issues, but will always come to obedient heel over the big stuff.

He is not a journo. He is not in any sense “objective”. He’s not wearing a blue helmet, so why treat him like he is?

Why not come right back at him? Why not simply and directly ask Tim Russert why he doesn’t believe crimes and incompetence at the highest levels of government should be investigate?

Why anyone lying a nation into a war shouldn’t be prosecuted?

Why our 2,400 dead children deserve anything less?

Update: (For any civic-minded citizens, turns out Mr. Russert is heading out on a book tour very shortly.

It is, I understand, a ticketed event, and I don’t have the particulars, but in the cause of fearlessly ferreting out the truth no matter where it takes you – a motive I’m sure Mr. Russert would find nothing but noble – I would be interested in hearing from anyone who finds an opportunity to ask him one or two firm-yet-civil question about his journalistic slovenliness and biases.)

26 comments:

Anonymous said...

Russert, Cohen, and the rest of that squad matter less each day. They don't bring anything to the table. They sit below and catch table scraps tossed by those that trained them to roll-over. I love the internet. The info monopoly is done. If Russert or Cohen were forced to deal with instant feedback they'd curl up into the fetal position and wet themselves. And rightly so.

Anonymous said...

I don't think a comparison to the Kentucky Derby is fair in this piece that so excellently (word?) describes the media scrum, etc. The Derby - if you can get past the hats and the rich folk - is about the conditions of the track and the passion of the horses and jockeys. When those things come together, it's... well, magic.

In politics and media, that convergence is much less likely and much more dangerous.

-- mac

Anonymous said...

In other news, Twitney is knocked up again. Isn't that the fifth sign of the Apocalypse?

driftglass said...

anon,
It'd be just plain funny to watch if the consequences of them wicked witchmelting weren't so tragic.

mac,
I'm sure you're right, but honestly, it just bores me to tears. If I were at the races, maybe I'd feel different, but unless I'm at a Derby party getting a skinful of juleps, the whole buildup is a yawn. Its the same reason I almost never bother watching b-ball until the last 2 minutes: everything before that is irrelevent.

Kid Charlemagne,
The Apocalypse is dropping more signs than Burma Shave these days.

Anonymous said...

Good to have you back in the land of articulation, friend.

If Lady Justice were to take off her blindfold she'd see a large contingent of "journalists" belong in Gitmo alongside their tenders. Though in a pinch I'd be fine if they were discovered beaten senseless in a DC back-alley. Criminals one and all.

As for horse races, the only one I ever saw that deserved watching was when Secretariat won the Belmont by 32 lengths.

Anonymous said...

If you neglect

Anonymous said...

Your face each day

Anonymous said...

This is all

Anonymous said...

We have to say

Anonymous said...

BURMA SHAVE

Anonymous said...

Shouldn't that be "Myanmar Shave" these days? (Yes, I posted the "signs") ;)

Anonymous said...

We got muthafuckin' Myanmar Shave signs on the muthafuckin' plane!

(OK, that's it. I better go get some sleep before I return to mine more NaCl. I'm showing symptoms of sleep deprivation already. Sayonara.)

Anonymous said...

Great post. If I run into Punkin at a book signing I will lob a tough question and let you know the answer. I think Jane is right, they are covering (Punkin and Chrissie) their asses but they are also protecting their country club ownerships where they get to mingle with the big boys like DeLay and slap each other on the backs and get a general laugh over how rich they got to be jacking with the public for a living.

An Angry Old Broad said...

If this country ever manages to even partially recover from this madness,the"journalists"who enabled,misinformed and outright lied to the American People should,NEVER,EVER,be allowed anywhere near a camera again.Or a newspaper or magazine.Or anything closely resembling "media".

I won't state what I think should happen to them,it's not very generous,or kind.But,if all of them were relegated to jobs where they have to ask"would you like fries or an apple pie with that today?" that would be some Justice.I'd make a special trip to that location just to fast pitch a double cheeseburger and a large coke right in their faces.

They are accessories to War Crimes.

Anonymous said...

We'd all better become net neutrality activists or we are going back to the dark ages of nothing but the Timmuhs of the world.

Karen McL said...

Come-on -- Doesn't this David Blaine shit (and NO it's NOT Magic - Which I Likee Magic) remind you of those ole news-reels and footage of the tightrope-walkers (and circus-stunt performer tiptoing across a wire at the top of the Empire State Building) that took place during the depression era to "Cheer folks up" and keep ther mind off how screwed up the country was in that pre-New Deal Robber Baron JOY of Conservatives Values Time?

But it makes me wonder if people really feel a similar soul-sucking energy-depressing cloud of doom which Requires a David Blaine stunt to distract and Cheer folks up.

It's Beginning to feel that way - and can't wait til I get my pick-me-up Rove indictment and hopefully something to celebrate on Nov 3rd!!

Anonymous said...

Glad to have ya back at the wheel (might need to scrape a few spambarnacles off the hull, tho)

DG - yer starting to remind of a certain Jeff MacNelly character.

Meanwhile, D. Blaine's stunt in one word: Floater.

Anonymous said...

"It was a shabbily constructed weekend."
Man, I may crib that.
I believe that you were writing about my weekend.
Freshly divorced friend (who wants to run back to her abusive ex)? check
Melancholy? check
Can't form coherent thought, much less a sentence? Big check (Glad to see that you recovered from that one.)

As for magic, I'm not fond of any tricks pass the "pulling a coin out of your ear" one. Especially any TV magic. With the miracle of modern editing, I always doubt the experience on the couch matches the one in the studio.

Never been to a horse race.

As for Russert, I just can't be bothered to give a fuck about anything that he says.....Does this make me a bad person? Should I be chewing on him over his actions?
Do enough people believe him?
I think we are all just preaching to the choir. I do try to sneak some sense and sanity into conversation, but I don't think I've convinced anyone of anything.

I think I will stop babbling. I shouldn't post without benefit of caffeine.....

Anonymous said...

Oh, also wanted to add,
KidC, the burma shave ads were pretty funny....

Anonymous said...

Drift, this is for you. :o) It's a paragraph from Whitehouse.Org, the OTHER world-class flayers of bushCo ass. :o)

It's from their little send-up transcript of junior's phone call complaining to Clinton about Big Dog's partially successful effort to get coke and pepsi out of our schools, AND out of our schoolKIDS pancreas's, at least on public property.

We pick it up in junior's mid-phonerant, to Bill:

"...Time was, I could let the biggest security failure in american history occur on my watch, and even the editors of "The Nation" were queuing up to gang-nuzzle my taint, but after 5 years of killing who-knows-how many soldiers and arabiacs, to make my oil pals even richer,
suddenly, old Harry-and-Helen- Hotpockets-from-the-Heartland are catching on to how my actual agenda has always been just to cornhole the everlovin' shit out of them...in short, I look bad...and your lookin' good, don' help me none..."

Me: It's precious stuff...all the more so, because a surprising number of the dingbats, click on the site, expecting to take a weekly bath in salve-of-bushCo, only to find that they're getting a sulfuric-acid enema. :o)

It's great to have a back-up endorphin supply. :o)

Anonymous said...

Tracy Schmitt, I think I love you, Freddy Kruger

Anonymous said...

Six Steps to Success
Throughout the centuries history tells of men and women with the midas touch, who achieved greatness against what seemed insurmountable odds. To some their successes appeared to be the result of blind luck, to others the reward for hard work, but the truth about the successes of men such as Andrew Carnagie and Henry Ford is much more interesting.
Success is a state of mind to which all people should aspire. Like many others you can unlock te gate to achievement and the fulfilment of yor personal desires. With the six steps outlined below anyone can arrive at a set destination, with the added advantage of renewed self-confidence and secure in the knowledge that every goal is attainable.
Step 1. Desire
The key factor involved in the process of achieving any desire lies in the response of one's mind to the objective. If a complacent attitude is apparent then there will be a lack of enthusiasm leading to failure or only half-success.
If a goal is to be reached determination is needed to carry set plans through to a successful conclusion. This determination must have enough mental 'weight' behind it to propel you forward onto the road of achievement. This mental state can only be instilled by one thing - desire!
As can be easily seen, when we look around us, it is this desire-force that has launched mankind on his frenzied zest for ever-new knowledge and has enabled him to push back the boundaries of science to never dreamed of achievement.
It is this same desire-force that must be used in our business and personal affairs if the success we seek is to materialize. It is not very hard to develop this kind of desire for all you have to do is go after what you really want - its that simple. With this desire you will have all the persistence you need to accomplish your goal. There is a great saying "you never fail until you give up"!
Take heed of what Napoleon Bonaparte said "What we ardently and constantly desire, we always get".
Step 2. Goals
If success is to come your must realise what is expected to materialize. This statement may seem obvious at first but if careful thought is given its meaning takes on deeper significance.
Many people fail to gain satisfactory results from their endeavours because they did not know what they wanted to accomplish in the first place. Your objective must not be hazy or incomplete. Before you reach your goal you must be able to identify how your life will be different when you achieve it. You must know exactly what it is that you want to achieve. How will your life be better/different? How will you feel? What way will you look? What situations will you find yourself in? Will other people in your life be effected and if so how will they react? You need a clear definite picture in your mind of what the attainment of your goal will mean to you.
Step 3. Belief
Belief is the back-up system of desire. It keep the fires of enthusiasm burning and makes us continually strive to get nearer the goal attainment. Faith can truly move mountains; the mountains of fear, inferiority, worry and low self esteem - 'the success killers'!
Once a goal is firmly fixed in mind and our desire-force is hurtling us toward seemingly insurmountable obstacles, the firm belief that we can gain a favourable outcome can spur us on to victory. When the mind has been manipulated to reflect this state, wonderful physical results can ensue, producing symptoms of success in our lives in every area imaginable.
Although many can attest to the power of belief and to the wondrous accomplishments that were achieved through nothing else except faith, it still remains that many individuals find it hard to believe that a positive outcome will be forthcoming when they are faced with momentous opposition. Whether the opposition is mental or physical the fact that nothing seems to be going right and everything seems to be wrong is enough for even the strongest of us to 'throw in the towel'. But it is in these very situations that faith can conquer all. Faith in yourself, what you are doing and belief that that your objective will be reached.
There are some who bemoan "easier said than done". This is exactly the kind of mental attitude that sustains the problems that they are trying to eradicate. If your belief power is not apparent, take hope for it can be acquired.
Each morning and night recite your intentions from a written list of your goals. Voice your belief in your own abilities. Tell yourself that in due course you will be successful. As you go about your daily affairs reflect as often as possible on your goals and affirm that they are yours now. Fool your mind into believing it and you will see your world reflect it!
Step 4. Plan
Having decided upon your goal and being determined to build your faith you need to give your desire-force a 'vehicle' through which it may materialize. This 'vehicle' will take the form of a definite plan of action.
Do you need to acquire certain skills? Do you need to know certain people or be in certain places to help you achieve your goal? Make a plan that will help you get closer to your end objective. Research your desires and get clear on what you need to do. Then do it!
Ensure that your plan is workable and realistic for you. Although your plan should remain flexible so that changes can be made when appropriate only make changes after careful consideration. Trial and error will eventually show the way to a good plan although you should be open to intuition also.
However, I should point out that, it is very likely your goal will materialize in a most unexpected way. The fact that you have set a plan for its accomplishment tends to set things in motion and like a chain reaction (or the butterfly effect) subtle changes made by you may cause dramatic changes elsewhere and your goal may come before your plan is completed.
Step 5. Visualization
Visualization is the art of creating mental movies of your completed goal. This has many beneficial effects upon your consciousness. Without going into the deeper esoteric benefits of using this art let me just say that you are truly designing your life when you use it. It has one other major benefit - it strengthens your desire and persistence because you momentarily experience the thrill of having achieved your goal!
Just form a mental picture of having achieved your goal. See what you will see. Feel how wonderful it will be. See how it effects everyone around you. Hear people congratulate you. When this state is experienced nothing will stop you in your quest for your objective and thus your belief-power will also be reinforced.
Step 6. The Subconscious Mind
It is within the subconscious part of your mind that you hold all th positive and negative beliefs about yourself - your self-image. These beliefs are reflected back to you in the form of attitudes. Therefore it is from the subconscious mind that the thought of failure or success comes.
Attitudes are just mental programs and so is your self-image. They can easily be changed (yes I said 'easily'). Any attitude or belief can be changed by using the formula outlined in this article - by combining affirmations with visualization. Henry Ford used it, as did Ralph Waldo Emerson and even Arnold Swatzeneger. It is reported in some circles that a similar technique was employed by Bill Gates to build his global empire. Andrew Carnegie used it exactly as described to attain and give away multi-millions even though he was an unschooled manual worker when he started it. Carnegie's legacy can still be seen today when you freely borrow a book from any Carnegie library of which there are thousands.
If you use these six steps there is nothing you cannot achieve. Luckily we have the advantage of living in the Twentieth Century with all its new technology and innovations such as hypnosis and subliminal programming. Use these steps in conjunction with your favourite personal development system and you are assured success. personal development

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