Friday, July 25, 2008

Howard-Brekken nuptials


Minnesota is a singularly bug-infested place. Thankfully, mosquitoes seem to disregard my blood. They'll land on me and make a nuisance of themselves; but I haven't been stung much.

Lights outside the bar at the Ruttger's Bay Resort — site of Saturday's K.C.-Isaac wedding — were absolutely covered with all manner of flying creepy-crawly things. Made me realize Las Vegas has something to recommend it with its relatively buglessness.

Friday night was the rehearsal dinner in Brainerd (yes, the one from "Fargo"), followed by drinks and a rousing game of Apples to Apples back at Ruttger's Bay — which sits on Mille Lacks, by my estimation one of the five largest of Minnesota's 14,000-plus lakes.

The wedding is Saturday at 5. I've been informed that the big Coffee Cruise is at 10:30 in the morning; I hold out hope there'll be tea available.

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Racist bastard, 86, dies


Jesse Helms died Friday — fittingly on July 4, though, according to Wonkette's Ken Layne, about a quarter-century too late. The country is now a better place.

The Dixiecrat and longtime North Carolina senator was a driving force in moving the Republican Party away from its Lincolnian ideals and toward race-baiting and a general contempt for the downtrodden. It was dubbed the "Southern strategy," and the phrase was popularized during Richard Nixon's 1968 and 1972 White House runs when he essentially conceded the African-American vote.

Helms won election after election by wooing disaffected, racist whites with his hatred of blacks, gays, brown-skinned immigrants, liberals, etc. All the while he rode along in the pocket of Big Tobacco, passing fat-cat tax breaks that never actually trickled down to the huddled masses. On the Senate Foreign Relations Committee he promoted brutal third-world dictatorships in third world countries when they promoted U.S. Foreign Policy or corporate interests.

Just imagine: 2008 could be the year of the passing of Jesse Helms and the rise of Barack Obama. Maybe there's hope yet.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Texas Republicans are funny


Wonkette claims everyone at the Texas GOP Convention wore this pin. And AMERICAblog makes the good point that McCain should be held accountable for some of these associations.

Especially since Fox News' conservative entertainer-talkers having been harping on Obama associates for months.

'Don't ask, don't tell' could haunt Nunn


Former Georgia Sen. Sam Nunn's name has been bandied about as a possible running mate for Democratic nominee Barack Obama. But, as Jonathan Capeheart writes in The Washington Post, Nunn was a driving force 15 years ago behind the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy with regard to gays in the armed forces.

The Nunn-as-VP idea has gained traction with many Democrats because the former chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee would balance Obama's thin foreign policy experience.

But Capeheart argues Nunn's inclusion on the ticket would dampen the enthusiasm of gay and lesbian supporters: "Already, the prospect of an Obama-Nunn ticket does not sit well with some prominent gay Democratic fundraisers. 'It would without question irrevocably diminish my enthusiasm for the democratic ticket,' a longtime Clinton supporter told me in an e-mail. 'Sam Nunn not only opposed [lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people's] rights to serve in the military, he viciously campaigned against it.' "

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Wonderful 'Once'


The description on the Netflix envelope called "Once" a musical. It's not — at least in the traditional sense — but it is a musical film.

Made for $160,000 by Irish writer-director John Carney, "Once" follows its unnamed leads — Irish singer Glen Hansard ("Guy") and Czech-born Markéta Irglová ("Girl") — on their quest to record a demo of his songs. (Hansert is the lead singer of the Irish band the Frames; Carney played base in the band from 1991-1993.)

"Once" is in no hurry to tell its story. And it is not all that interested with certain details of its characters' lives. What Carney cares about is the music — and the relationship that develops between the Guy and the Girl. The result is magical and authentic. The music — his and hers — is captivating: When they meet in an early scene, he is singing and playing guitar for tips on a Dublin street. It is his music that draws her in.

And, it's her encouragement and help that lead him to book time in a little music studio. Even the studio's apathetic sound engineer is drawn in by Hansard, Irglová and two other street musicians Hansard recruits to play.

"Once" has grossed $14 million worldwide ($9 million in the United States), and the duo's song "Falling Slowly" won the 2008 Academy Award for Best Song. Since the film's release, Hansard, 38, and Irglová, 20 — who are now a couple living together in Dublin — have toured, performing songs from the Grammy-nominated soundtrack.

"Once" is no classic Hollywood romance. What Carney gives us is a glimse of the love and music that grow between two people who meet by chance. It lives up to its tagline: "How often do you find the right person?"

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Once again, no Triple Crown

Da' Tara, a 38-1 shot, led from start to finish to win the Belmont Stakes on Saturday, spoiling Big Brown's Triple Crown attempt. The favorite became the seventh horse since 1997 to fail in the Belmont after winning the Kentucky Derby and Preakness.

Big Brown didn't have his normal acceleration around the final turn and was eased in the stretch by jockey Kent Desormeaux. He just galloped across the finish line, last in the field of nine. Walter Blum Jr., an assistant to trainer Rick Dutrow, said Big Brown checked out fine after the race.

Questions will persist in the coming days: Was it the quarter crack in the colt's left front hoof? Did he suffer from pulmonary bleeding? The 93-degree heat in New York?

Or was it just the grueling Triple Crown schedule — three big races in five weeks? Next year, it will have been 31 years since Affirmed outdeuled Alydar in all three races.

Yes, he will


Even before Japanese invader Casino Drive was withdrawn this morning from the Belmont Stakes, Big Brown was the pick to take it and become the 12th Triple Crown winner.

1. Big Brown
He's done everything right so far, winning five races by a combined 39 lengths. But this is the Belmont, where 18 of the past Triple Crown hopefuls have lost.

2. Denis of Cork
Was one of the few horses still running at the end of the Derby, where he finished third. Has had five weeks off and looms the main threat.

3. Anak Nakal
Has been way too slow thus far to compete with Big Brown. But the distance should be no problem, and he should pass tired horses in the stretch.

4. Tale of Ekati
The fourth-place finisher in the Derby has also been rested for this. He is 2-for-2 at Belmont Park.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Off to T&C

Isaac and I are on the plane. Dallas ETA is 2:13 p.m. CDT. We're still debating whether to start with a cocktail in flight. "Vodka or virgin," Isaac just said, "that is the question." (We decided against first class; Isaac would have felt obligated to "tie one on.")

The second-annual Memorial Day Weekend Tea & Crumpets Affair awaits.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Fall has arrived

LAS VEGAS — After a four-day summer that saw two heat records, the desert southwest welcomed the first day of fall on Wednesday.

Meteorologists predicted highs in the mid-80s for Wednesday, just two days after a high of 108 obliterated by 6 degrees the date's previous record.

By Friday, experts with the National Weather Service said, winter will have arrived, with a high as low as 71.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Listing, Part 2


At the Review-Journal we've recently started sort of a blogging book club — certain staffers with large reading appetites write about books they've read (here's one of Anne's on this page.

So I've been thinking about blogging and reading. Unfortunately, I'm slow at both. But here's my list of my five favorite books (in order, of course):

1. "A Confederacy of Dunces" by John Kennedy Toole
This 1980 Pulitzer Prize-winner was published 11 years after the author's death. His mother had hounded southern Louisiana professors for years in hope she'd find someone who would recommend the work. She finally found her mark in Walker Percy, himself a novelist who was then a member of the faculty of Loyola University in New Orleans. The head "Dunce," Ignatius J. Reilly, is one of literature's classic characters.

2. "Travels With Charley" by John Steinbeck
Steinbeck's nonfiction story of his 1960 Long Island-to-California journey with his faithful poodle. His description of bears in national parks is one of the funniest things I've read.

3. "The Great Gatsby," F. Scott Fitzgerald
Like "Dunces" and Nabakov and "Heart of Darkness," I was slow to get to "Gatsby" and other classics. Wonder if the Barstow Unified School District is to be blamed. After reading this one, I couldn't remember why I had disregarded it so long.

4. "A Walk in the Woods," Bill Bryson
I wanted to include a Bryson book on the list; I'm not certain this is my favorite among his works. But it was the first one I read and is much-loved.

5. "What's the Matter with Kansas," Thomas Frank
Over the past 3-4 years I've read nonfiction primarily. Especially politics. Franks is probably the best writer among those I've read (apologies to Malcolm Gladwell and Al Franken, who is actually quite good). The author's main question: Why do so many people (especially in rural and suburban Kansas, where he was raised) vote against there own economic self-interest? The "backlash," he calls it, as he travels to every corner of the state.

Listing, Part 1

While I have yet to see "Once," "Atonement," "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly," "The Savages" and many others, here are my five favorite movies of 2007:

1. "No Country For Old Men"
2. "There Will Be Blood"
3. "The Bourne Supremecy"
4. "Across the Universe"
5. " Charlie Wilson's War"

Monday, May 12, 2008

Hello

12 May 2008 — My first blog post. The end.