Friday, 18 October 2019

Mailbag

Subject: Dave Mason Revue

Hi Bob,

This is Johnne Sambataro the guitar player in the Dave Mason Band. I just wanted to thank you for taking the time to come and see us perform at the Saban. Also for writing such a descriptive article about what we do and what we're about. Good Job!!!

On a personal note I would like to thank you for your compliments on "Can't Find My Way Home". I started playing it about 3 years ago at a Dave Mason rehearsal and Dave said "Let's put it in the show". It fit in with all the other songs that add to the journey and tied itself right into the Delaney & Bonnie / Blind Faith connection with Dave.

Maybe someday we can get together and talk about the music that came out of South Florida in the 60's, 70's and 80's. I lived it and that's where I met Dave in 1978 while he was recording the "Mariposa De Oro" album. People ask me all the time "What's it like to play with Dave Mason"? Well it's quite an honor to play with someone I've been a fan of since before I met him. It's actually really cool.

Take care and be well.

Johnne Sambataro
www.JohnSambataro.com

_____________________________________

Subject: Re: The Who Song

I am in a van with John Waite and the rest of the band. It's midnight. We just played a club in Flint Michigan called the Machine Shop .About 500 fans. Turned out to be a great gig. The fans love John. I'm in the back seat reading your Who Song email and John, who acts as the D J in the front seat, puts on Empty Glass . What a great moment. John didn't know I was reading your fantastic email. This moment , finished a great gig , reading your email , listening to Pete & and onto the next gig in Ohio , well , it just doesn't get any better for this drummer. At 66 yrs old no less " Keep on Working" Bob & all my fellow musicians ??????????Thank you Bob . What a great fuckin read !

Alan Childs

_____________________________________

From: Paul Nordlund
Subject: Re: The Who Song

Jeebus! Thanks for turning me onto this tune. I put it on my Apple Music as I read your email and you're right, I had to turn it up. I heard soft, contemporary, over-produced dreck at the gym today and had to put in my air-buds. Imagine Dragons!? How do people do it when there is real power out there.

And I love the lyric in All This Music Must Fade: "I don't mind other guys ripping off my song..." An obvious wink to "The Kids are Alright" lyric, "I don't mind other guys dancing with my girl..." And it's used not as a throwback but as The Who ripping off their own song. What put Pete and Roger ahead of the pack (including the Stones) for those who took an interest in them is they've got real heart. They never fully acquiesced to the marketing package/fan-rape like bands of their ilk have since the late-'80s (see: previously mentioned Stones and their larceny-like $250 nosebleed tickets). Roger's boxing background has stayed true. They don't sell out and they really don't care as you have expressed. They swing. Thank you for reminding me The Who still are in play. I had forgotten this.

Paul

_____________________________________

From: Mark Caplinger
Subject: Re: Pretty Heart

Hi Bob

I noted your reference to Parker McCollum here. I follow the Texas music scene a bit but the name was new to me so I checked him out. Good stuff. I happened to see he was going to be in Stillwater, OK last Friday night. So was I, visiting my son on Parent's Weekend at Oklahoma State University.

There's a party at my son's place Friday, lots of kids and parents hanging around. I overhear someone ask a young lady if she wants to go do something later, and she said "I can't, I'm going to see Parker."

As if everyone should just know, right? Like "Beck" or "Eminem" or "Bono". So I asked her "Parker? Who's Parker?"

Parker McCollum as it turns out, which I was pretty sure I already knew. She told me it was a sold out show, she and a friend got the last tickets.

I know it's a sample set of one but thought you might be interested to know it appears "Parker" has got it going on with the college crowd, at least at Oklahoma State University.

Really enjoy your emails. Thanks and keep 'em coming!

Best,

Mark Caplinger

_____________________________________

From: Bud Scoppa
Subject: Re: Mailbag

Karl is right: Matt gets the score with Tool, but Kevin Coogan, who brought in Green Jello, and Lou himself were also key to the band coming to Zoo. Tom DeSavia turned me on to the Odds , who later toured with Zevon and doubled as his backing band. Underrated in the States.

_____________________________________

Subject: RE: Precipitous Drops

Bob, my street-level experience over three decades in the thick of it at EMI was this: The much-heralded project either under-performs or else stiffs out altogether, causing the artist 's management to brutalize the label chief. Label chief then threatens and cajoles several chieftains, who in turn menace local honchos. Local honchos then buy ads, stroke PDs, put up billboards, activate street teams, sponsor contests, give away tickets/trips/backstage passes/swag...after which, the project briefly regains momentum, then sinks to the bottom and finally (sometimes after 8 or 9 months of futile activity) goes away. Paul Lanning

_____________________________________

Subject: Re: Re-Heart Correction

I love Joan Jett. She defied the odds! Also Kenny Laguna put all his eggs in one basket back then because he believed in Joan when nobody else did. When I was 13, I was diagnosed with dyslexia and wasn't really able to keep up in school but I had music... and Joan Jett! She was an inspiration to me and she still is. And God bless Kenny!! Over 40 years later and they are still together. In this business- that should not be taken for granted. That is a gift - for both of them.

There are two sets of business - your business and none of your business and her sexuality is the later.

Dina LaPolt

_____________________________________

Subject: Biden and Air Supply ... RE: Pre-Debate Update

Hi Bob,

You actually gave Joe Biden a major compliment by comparing him to the "Air Supply of Presidential Candidates."

I have been doing PR for Air Supply for over 15 years and they are by far the most professional and thoughtful I have ever worked for. Graham Russell and Russell Hitchcock are true gentlemen who never take their fans for granted or rest on their laurels. They perform about 130 gigs each year, all around the world and these are large theaters, showrooms, and even some arenas/stadiums.

After 40 years in the biz they still work harder than ever. Have never had a real argument between them. They do their tour press interviews for every market, sound-check at every venue, shake up their show set list often, interact with the audience, meet & greets with fans, and have a highly talented energetic band so the show really rocks. Their manager, tour manager, and some of the crew have been with them for decades and everything just works and it's a joy to work together. The venues/promoters always invite them back year after year and the people just keep coming.

I always tell G & R, I won't retire until they do, and that is not even on the horizon at this point.

Plenty of those hipper-than-thou "soft rock" proclaimers from the 80s & 90s have themselves fallen by the wayside. So maybe Biden is also the little engine that could -- they have!

PS - Elizabeth Warren would make a kick-ass VP. However Air Supply does not need an opening act.

Best,

Steve Levesque - President

LUCK Media & Marketing, Inc.
Entertainment Publicity & Marketing

_____________________________________

From: Wallace Collins
Subject: Re: Eddie Money At The Grammy Museum

Bob

Nice read - made me a bit verklempt. Pierced some shield this morning i guess, caught me by surprise.

Ha! Wait. As I write I realize why: "Phillips" & the "cassette" mention made me remember my dad. He was general counsel for Phillips US (his legal department was the internal M&A, acquired all the companies & built it). I never learned to properly razor shave because we had Norelcos before we were old enough. Magnavox Color TVs (plural) all over the house. Cassette players a plenty, of course. Rod Stewart records before he broke in the US because Phillips acquired Mercury for a while. I now know I saw email & the internet before they called it that: my dad was bedridden after back surgery but had a big box computer by his bed where he typed green words on a screen & his office wrote back & forth so he could work. Last bit, I moved into the city for law school & he gave me a small box to attach to my stereo. Told me soon small discs would be coming to play on it, but I went to the record store & all they had was one or two classical discs, not the rock i wanted. I recall him saying "just wait" - it was a prototype CD player (I still have it).

Funny how a random word ("Phillips" & "cassette" of all things) can trigger memories & emotions.

Wallace - Sent from my iPhone

_____________________________________

From: Joseph Weinstein
Subject: Re: Pre-Debate Update

Bezos/Zuck/Gates/Musk could agree to pay off student debt ($100k per) for 300,000 recent college graduates if they'll relocate and establish residency in Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Florida prior to the next election. Trump won those states by 190,000 in aggregate. 75 electoral votes at stake. Given all of the environmental repeals as of late, $30 billion could be the deal of the century!

_____________________________________

Subject: Re: The Climate Strike

Bob-
Virtually my all of my middle & youngest daughters' entire high school walked out on strike today. It became a ghost town, and was impressive to see. I'm just barely old enough to have walked out to protest the Vietnam War [in 7th grade], and they went to exactly the same place [on the UIUC college campus]. This gave me a lot of hope. They are also almost all blind to color, gender, race, class, money, and religion. A very tolerant bunch who are mad as hell and won't take it anymore. Bravo!

*You are spot on re their view on cars as well
**This is Central Illinois, not the bluest of part of the state…
**Keep it up sir, you have been on a tear this year and keep hitting home runs- from your memorials, to the new world realities, to this youth quake.

Best-
--
Jonathan Pines - Director of Strategic Operations
Rupert Neve Designs / Fingerprint Audio

_____________________________________

From: Leora Katz
Subject: Re: The Climate Strike

at dinner last night, i said to my husband: "so amazing to see the massive, worldwide protests against climate change today, eh?" (yes i'm canadian)

he said: "huh? what are you talking about?"

i was shocked. he's on twitter all day. uses instagram multiple times a day. is very plugged into news, what's going on in culture, etc.

but he had seen nothing about the climate strikes, while my feeds had been full of it.

and it's simply because the people and outlets he follows didn't mention it, while the ones i follow were all over it.

it was a stark reminder of our individual echo chambers and how something huge can be going on, but totally invisible to someone whose "scene" is just slightly different.

_____________________________________

Subject: RE: Re-JBL L100s

The midrange driver in the JBL L-100s is the same one we used by the dozens in the Grateful Dead's infamous "Wall of Sound". They were and still are one of the best midrange drivers of all times! Owsley "Bear" Stanley conceived of "the Wall", and he designed the curved front array of JBL 12" drivers, 5" drivers, and the ElectroVoice tweeters. You can Google for images. Sounded just wonderful. I was on the design committee and did the blueprints for most of the conventional rectangular boxes in the system based on dimensions for L, W, and H being 1/3 of a wavelength apart. JBL was thrilled with how many of their loudspeakers we used!

Best,

Rick Turner

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From: Jon Birge
Subject: Re: Hillbilly Elegy

The difference is that Westover's point is that education was the difference between her siblings who had meaningful lives and those who didn't. She didn't have many advantages. Vance doesn't go into how he had a state legislature internship in high school and then the one in D.C. Not sure those are doled our on merit. Might be a piece missing in his narrative.

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Subject: Re: Hillbilly Elegy

Bob,
REALLY bad news: JD spun -- or as I like to tell my Music Criticism students at Middle Tennessee State University extremed -- his high-low white trash upbringing.
How do I know? I used to play golf at the very old money country club in South Florida his uncle belongs to. His father -- the extreme Christian one -- had money. That side of the family was plenty successful. He had a far greater grasp of how the levers worked... but why let the facts get in the way of setting up a run for office?
This is important. For a lot of reasons. But I'll start with dignity. Don't be like Ron Howard who fell in love with the marginalizing tropes + bought into the boot strap achievement notion.
Best,
Holly Gleason
Nashville, TN

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From: Dave Dederer
Subject: Re: Hillbilly Elegy

Bob,

The game is, indeed, rigged. I learned this when I transferred to Brown my junior year in college.

In 1985, Seattle was still a provincial town. I'd been to NY and visited my girlfriend at Brown, but I didn't get it until I arrived full-time.

Meeting other kids out west, we'd ask about what music you liked, do you like to ski, hike, climb, surf, skate? I'll never forget the questions kids asked me the first few days at Brown: "Where'd you prep?" "Does your dad work on the Street? Or Capitol Hill?"

I wondered, "What the fuck is wrong with these people?"

It was an eye-opener -- immediately clear that THESE are the people running the country, forever and ever, amen. And all they cared about was where I fit into the calcified social strata they called home.

But of course that's all a total load of bullshit. Because even if you're winning the game, you're still playing the game. And the game is profoundly dumb and pointless relative to things like making art or living according to values that reflect true respect for oneself and for others.

Per NYT article today, ambitious, rich people don't stop working -- because they find they can't quite win the game.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/17/style/rich-people-things.html

They're playing the wrong game. As Wynton Marsalis said, when talking about the incorruptibility of jazz or any true art form, "You can't money your way into being Picasso." You have to do the work. The work of being fearlessly and authentically yourself, plus the just plain hard graft of putting in the hours and the effort. With no guarantee of a payoff, unlike putting in the hours at HBS or Wharton or Stanford Law School, which comes with a guaranteed payoff.

As a Seattle native of a certain age and educational and social background, I know lots of people who made lots of money in tech. You know what many of them do for fun and wish they could do for a living? Play music. And they spend crazy money for great tix to shows. They want to be rock stars. Meaning they want to create something of undeniable value that touches and moves people. Because they know that building a cloud-based sales contact management platform and selling it for hundreds of millions or being an early investor in an online ad startup MSFT eventually acquired for billions is...meaningless. And dorky. And not fun.

But you don't have to choose one or the other. You can understand the game and also play outside the rules. Subvert from within, as it were.

My older daughter just started her freshman year at an Ivy League school. She is smart, ambitious and very hard-working. I say more power to her. She will learn the rules of the game and will know the players. These advantages are just tools. I will encourage her to do the real work of finding a mission -- music, art, medicine, diplomacy, whatever -- and to live out that mission. To play the real game.

_____________________________________

From: Melissa Ward
Subject: Re: Once Upon A Time...in Hollywood

Well I thought I was late to the film two weeks ago. It was entrancing to watch The Strip recreated so perfectly.

My mom and stepdad would load us into the car (a white Fleetwood Brougham with red brocade and real wood interior) each time my grandmother or step grandmother or some other guests were visiting from out of town. I wanted so badly to be out there on the strip in a mini dress and pigtails, yet just thirteen I was kept close to home, highly supervised. I slunk down as far as possible so none of the hippies would see me seeing them.

Later around '70-'72 my girlfriends and I would drive up from OC and eat at Tiny Naylors drive-in, then cruise up into the hills above the strip gazing at the snazzy homes, entranced to see some with four or five fancy cars parked in the sparkle-laden stucco car ports. He really got it right though!

What tickled me was remembering how inane it all was - media - the silly radio announcers and silly commercials. Media was awash in the superficial.
And yes females were mostly programmed to rely on their looks for success, men on their confidence and intelligence. Too bad as pretty as she is the actress who played Tate didn't come close to her beauty or class. I never could believe it was her. The Manson guy wasn't scary, only the one who played The hair stylist seemed to pull it off. Hard though to recreate these people of many decades and an entirely different age. I don't think people who grew up in the digital age can ever portray a non-digital character. And Im probably wrong!

As one who was a hippie in the early 70s in SoCal, I actually met and unfortunately became briefly acquainted with a guy (Eagle) who had lived at the Spahn Ranch, and yes, those girls in the film came nowhere close to the scary hippies girls I met. He was a scary horrible creepy guy. One girl was from The Love Family up north, many of whom later died with Jim Jones in Guyana. They weren't the Love & Light New Age spiritual vegans I hung with. They were lustful for power and willing to do anything to get it.

So the film was a bit of fluff, still entertaining, and yes Brad Pitt's character was by far the best thing about it. And his amazing dog.

_____________________________________

From: Lindsay Faller
Subject: Re: The Republican Viewpoint

Interesting read - frustrating but interesting. I always wonder why many Americans have such a deep belief that government is useless and paying taxes isn't fair. As if schools will fund themselves and laws will be made by themselves. Also, do people think what Trump's being investigated is about the Dems losing 2016? The guy is a thug, everyone can see it, though honestly, this whole thing feels like taking Al Capone out with a parking ticket.

I am American but have lived abroad for almost 20 years. First in London, now in Amsterdam (hello Brexit!) and my view of taxes and government has shifted completely. The current situation in the UK aside, the nanny state gets a bad rap, but it is also a good to know that if I got sick I wouldn't bankrupt my family. That my public transport system works brilliantly. I'm happy to pay taxes for that, because it helps me and helps others. When government works it is a wonderful thing. Maybe the issue in the US is that the country was founded on an underlying distrust of government and the current system is a self fulfilling prophecy. It's all about the individual, not the collective good, and therein lies the problem.

Also interesting: all your included replies were by men.

_____________________________________

From: Winky
Subject: Re: Dirty Honey

Bob,

The band is doing great work on the road and on the charts, but I am not the manager. I am just a friend and enthusiastic ambassador for the guys and their music. Mark has done an amazing job with his team getting them to where they are today. They are the real deal !

_____________________________________

From: PhilTripp
Subject: Re: Four Dead Ramones

If you don't make mistakes you're not doing anything.


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Thursday, 17 October 2019

El Camino

It wasn't great, but at least you find out what happens to Jesse Pinkman.

This is what happens when you give someone too much money. Not Jesse, but Vince Gilligan. What was notable about "Breaking Bad" was how fast and flat it was shot, demonstrating the capital constraints of basic cable.

And "Breaking Bad" did not really flourish until it was on Netflix, deep into the show's run. Yes, it did look a bit better thereafter, but still...

"El Camino" is gorgeous. And the camera angles can be startling. With all that cash, Gilligan could deliver would he could not before, a great look, the only thing being the story, the execution of the plot, was not up to the visuals.

Now one thing that was great is there was no catching up and no explaining. No trailer before illustrating what happened previously and no amplification of references. You were supposed to know everything, who the people were, how they figured in, the plot...

This is so different from movies. Most movies are only seen once, it's all got to be explained. But when something can be repeated and analyzed on the tube which is no longer that, but a flat screen of LED or OLED or...you're immersed in the medium, in the story.

You're shocked when Badger and Skinny Pete reappear. You haven't thought of them for a long time and they look older. But they're still the same doofuses. And Skinny Pete's reverence of Jesse is notable, we've all got our heroes, yet most people don't know they serve that role for others.

Pinkman/Aaron Paul also looks older, he now looks mature as opposed to immature, but you adjust.

Which leaves us with the plot.

People were looking forward to "El Camino." But the reviews were not spectacular, at least not in the mainstream media, and for those of us whose time is as valuable as our money, we still pay attention to these things. I watch nothing without checking Rotten Tomatoes first.

But Rotten Tomatoes gives "El Camino" pretty good ratings.

You see the first hour is slow. And you can't figure out exactly where it's going.

But when you do, after Pinkman visits Robert Forster, which is so weird, since he just died, the movie picks up, you're engaged, how is it going to play out?

Now I've got a free subscription to Apple TV+ because I got an iPhone 11 Pro Max (isn't Promax an energy bar?) You don't have to buy one, unless you're still stuck in buttonland, as in an iPhone 7 or 8, sure, the processor is faster than on last year's phone, and sure the camera is superior, but it's hard to sense the speed and I haven't taken a photo since I got it. But I signed up for the new phone every year program, now that the discounts are done. I mean what device do I use more than my iPhone? It's worth it to have a new one, at least to me! And, I bought the Apple coverage for breakage and loss, so I've got peace of mind. I know, I know, it's a bad deal economically, but I don't want to have to worry about my phone.

So, Apple TV+ is gonna have a large number of subscribers because everybody who gets a new Apple product will get a year's free subscription.

As for HBO and Disney's offerings...

The truth is Nickelodeon has faded, there are so many options for children's entertainment these days. So, parents don't have to rush to sign up for Disney Plus, even though it's so damn cheap. The problem is getting people to sign up to begin with...keeping them engaged, as in paying monthly, is much less difficult.

As for HBO Max... $14.99 is actually more than Netflix, at least for most subscribers. So the channel will be hit dependent. As for decades of previous HBO product...that's been available for years, it's not such a draw.

My point is there's a first mover advantage. It's kind of like Spotify and Apple Music. People know and trust Apple, but Spotify broke ground first, and although Apple Music's subscriber number is about the same as Spotify's in the U.S., it lags greatly in the rest of the world, and will probably never catch up.

Although Spotify and Apple Music feature essentially the same product, which is not the case with these streaming television services.

So, I expect Disney Plus and HBO Max to have millions of subscribers instantly, but it will be a long hard slog to reach Netflix's numbers, which I don't think they'll ever reach, only Disney Plus has a chance, not only because of the price but those damn Marvel movies, which the brain dead watch over and over again.

But streaming television is not about high concept popcorn flicks. Streaming television is about story, it's about depth.

The world is hooked on story. He or she who can tell a tale well is the winner.

So you've got to give Vince Gilligan credit. He's a great storyteller. But "El Camino" had too much weighing on it, if it were shot quickly on the cheap with less aforethought it would have been better.

Then again, the best part is when Pinkman has breakfast with Heisenberg, proving that "Breaking Bad"'s success was based on Bryan Cranston and his interaction with Aaron Paul.

So I'll watch the next "Breaking Bad" movie, if there is one, I know these characters, I'm invested in them.

And what I like most about Vince Gilligan is he respects his viewers. You don't find this in studio movies, nor on network TV, not even on the channels like HBO and Showtime which dribble their series out, making you wait. Talk about getting blue balls...

We live in an on demand culture, we want it all and we want it now. If you try to artificially prevent this, the joke is on you. People are not gonna buy CDs after they've encountered streaming. Of course some will, but most people are addicted to the new paradigm.

And the great thing is if you touch someone, all they want is more. This is what purveyors don't understand, they're all caught up in marketing, second-guessing the viewer. Deliver something spectacular, especially on streaming television, and people will find it and spread the word about it, because almost everybody has a subscription, everybody's searching for stuff to watch and when they have a EUREKA! viewing experience they want to tell everyone about it.

Now a great show does not let your mind wander. And mine did a bit during the first hour or so of "El Camino," but the concepts are there to ingest and contemplate. I haven't thrown my popcorn in the trash and forgotten about it. Actually, now that I know what happens, I almost want to watch "El Camino" again, to soak up the other elements.

As for the card to Brock Cantillo...

Gilligan knew viewers would freeze the frame, this is not a movie theatre where you miss something, where the story has to be up front and center. "El Camino" is deep. There's tons of explanation online, like "Esquire"'s article delineating all the "Easter Eggs": https://bit.ly/2J3oMga

It doesn't really matter what I have to say about "El Camino," if you watched "Breaking Bad" you must see it, and will.

But to tell you the truth, I'd be more interested in a movie about "The Americans."


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Hillbilly Elegy

https://amzn.to/32q63TA

Anybody who's a friend of Peter Thiel is not a friend of mine.

Well, not exactly, but what bugged me about the press for this book is that they neglected to point out J.D. Vance's entrenchment with right wingers, as in this book was seen as an insight into the poor white underbelly of America which voted for Trump and no one pointed out that this was not written by a neutral party, that Vance might have an agenda.

But Steve Martin at APA sent me a copy and I pulled it up and was shocked to find that "Hillbilly Elegy," despite the political spin, was really closer to Tara Westover's "Educated." You've probably read that book, as you should, it'll make your jaw drop, you won't believe what happens. Similar deal with "Hillbilly Elegy" re Vance's parents and upbringing, pretty riveting, easy reading.

But what made the biggest impression upon me was the end, where Vance talks about going to Yale Law School and the doors it opened, that's why you should read this book.

You see it's a club and you're not a member.

As for those in Appalachia...reading this book and Vance's conclusions make you want to double-down on being a member of the elite, the ignorance and contempt of Vance's world for the elite is so ridiculous that you want to throw your hands up in the air and move on. Then again, I do not agree with Vance's conclusion that no aid should be given, that money can't solve the problems of these people. Sure, their mind-set is ingrained, but you've got to start somewhere.

And the place to start is opportunity.

Need-blind. Most people have no idea what that term even means. Which is if you ain't got the money, you can still go to the college. Yup, almost all of the most elite colleges are need-blind, meaning your ability to pay is not taken into their consideration of whether to admit you or not. And if you are admitted, they give you financial aid up to...a full-ride. I knew a bunch of people at Middlebury who were on a full-ride, this is a good thing.

But most people don't know about it. Even the middle class...I remember telling friends to have their kids apply to the elite colleges, but they said they were too expensive, so their kids ended up not applying, they just couldn't wrap their head around the concept of need-blind.

Now interestingly, a large number of need-blind college students were need-blind at prep schools. Don't get me started on prep schools, what they do prepare you for is life, that it's all about connections, who you know.

And that's what's highlighted at the end of "Hillbilly Elegy."

Vance says the work at Yale Law School wasn't that hard, but just by getting in you were part of the connection/favor network. Hell, his mentor is Amy Chua, that's right, the self-professed "Tiger Mom."

Most people have no idea how the elite world operates. When it comes to institutions, corporations, politics, just about everything but entertainment and sometimes tech, it depends upon who you know to get ahead...

Let's see, the two-faced Sheryl Sandberg went to Harvard, hooked up with Larry Summers and not only worked for him in the government as his chief of staff when he was Secretary of the Treasury, she was handed the gig at Google which led to her job at Facebook. As for Facebook's aggressive tactics, their need to survive and thrive at all costs...don't only blame Mark Zuckerberg, Sheryl Sandberg is complicit.

But she did not work her way up from the bottom, she wasn't one of the Harvard bros who built Facebook, but she had the CV, and she knew Summers.

Vance says sending resumes is worthless, you've got to know someone to get a gig, someone in the elite, who went to school with a person at the institution which is hiring. And if you're not part of this club...GOOD LUCK!

Read "Hillbilly Elegy" for all this. Not for the politics, but how Vance leverages his Yale status to get a top clerkship that he desires and then how David Frum gets him into the right law firm.

This is how the world works. And this is why we hate it.

Yup, it's a club, where favors are owed. And you can't penetrate it if you ain't got the CV.

And if you're not a networker, if you don't know how to use your relationships, trade favors, forget it. We no longer live in a world of lifetime employment. It's all about hopping from job to job based on your friends/relationships and most people don't have elite relationships and never will.

Artists are usually not networkers, that's a different skill, that's why they need managers, agents and record labels.

Being talented and doing good work is not enough in this world. The corporations, the government, they're all tied together via an old boy network fostered by the elite institutions.

That's right, the game is rigged.

And chances are you can't even see the board, never mind have a piece on it.

This is what the college admissions scandal is all about. It's not what you learn in college, but who you befriend at the institution, the relationships you can leverage down the line.

Meritocracy, schmeritocracy.


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Peter Paterno-This Week's Podcast

Attorney extraordinaire Peter Paterno represents a who's who of clients. Listen to hear his story from Orange County to Harvey Mudd to signing Queen at Hollywood Records to Metallica to Dr. Dre to "Blurred Lines" to...

https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1119-the-bob-lefsetz-podcast-30806836/

https://open.spotify.com/episode/0KlZyP2OGQDpHh9AdzQMDP

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/peter-paterno/id1316200737?i=1000453848194

https://www.stitcher.com/s?eid=64660953


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Tuesday, 15 October 2019

The Debate

What kind of crazy, fucked-up world do we live in where Bernie Sanders has a heart attack and comes back stronger than ever?

One in which Elizabeth Warren is busy snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.

The best line of the night?

When Bernie said what the people want, that 71% want Medicare For All.

It is about the voters, right? That Trumps all the triangulation, right?

And speaking of Trump, Warren was so busy worrying about future Republican attacks that she wouldn't admit Medicare For All would raise people's taxes. Yes, it would be a net win, but when you can't answer a direct question over and over again...

You lose your credibility.

And that was Warren's key.

Does she think we can't do math? Have Republicans toxified the word "tax" to the point where no one can utter it? Our country runs on taxes, taxes are good. As for government waste...every business has waste, Amazon built distribution infrastructure and then tore it down when it was clear there was a better solution. The government can't even throw out food. As for the private sector always doing better, how about those for-profit prisons, incentivized to house offenders, with less oversight than publicly-owned prisons with no profit motive. Some things just should not be in the private sector.

So Tulsi was labeled a favorite of the right in the NYT and she can't get over it. Then she immediately starts talking about the downsides of impeachment and I think the NYT is right. She's toast, she's got to go.

As for Amy Klobuchar... I can't put my finger exactly on why she bugs me. She's a self-satisfied nerd. It's like Lil Nas X saying he's the great hope for saving music. Huh?

Beto's got to go. He has no chance of winning.

Castro barely talked, kick him off the stage.

Kamala... She tried to attack Warren, as she did Biden in that previous debate, but it turned out Warren was on her side, made Kamala look bad.

Buttigieg. He lifted himself up to the top, surviving tier. He's young, he's educated, he's smart...it's just that he can't run the police department of his own damn town, he can't run on his experience.

Steyer?

Too late, sorry. And no charisma to boot. So you made your money in banking, why should we listen to you? Why don't you add something to society, build something, create something other than wealth.

Yang?

He talks about the future when no one else does. He's the antidote to grandpa Biden. Yang knows what's going on, but that's about all he knows, he's got ideas but no experience. I mean why him, just because he's a rich young techie? Zuckerberg is a rich young techie, he knows what's going on, do you want him to run the country?

Biden was better.

But he faded. Like he ran out of gas. He started misusing words, stumbling, and while he was busy running on his past...

Sanders zinged him and told him it was about the future.

As for Warren... She didn't warm up until the end, when most people had given up watching. I mean this debate was an endurance test, you really didn't miss anything, but the problem is most people watch from the beginning and that's when Elizabeth refused to admit Medicare For All would involve raising taxes. Isn't this what we hate about politicians? The duplicity, the dishonesty, the slipperiness?

Which leaves us with Bernie.

Sanders was speaking English. He didn't pull any punches. He was busy telling the truth. He didn't blink, he's not only for Medicare For All, he's willing to own the process when Warren just talks about people going bankrupt. Bernie gets to the heart of the matter...the damn corporations who are ripping us off.

Biden can't run because he can't win. And his son stepping down in China just makes him look guilty. Illustrating, once again, that Biden doesn't know how to play the game, he's full of missteps.

Warren's got to recharge, she's got to plug herself back into the Tesla supercharger and realize it's an uphill fight, that nothing really counts until you win the Presidency.

As for Bernie... Sure, he had a heart attack, but he was on his game. He shouted less, he was coherent, all his neurons were firing...

This is why Sanders did so well in 2016. Being honest. Speaking to the human condition in America today. Warren came out removed. In Bernie you saw someone who's been fighting for the little guy from day one.

But being President means you've got to get along with everybody else to get things done. This has not been Bernie's strong point, certainly not in the Senate.

But one thing's for sure, no one on stage looked like a sure shot against Trump. Bernie was the only one with any believable zest. Biden got hot under the collar and pounded his fist on the lectern and you reacted, who is this old guy who is out of control?

Trump goes for the hearts and minds of his base, he speaks directly to them.

The only person speaking to the voters tonight was Bernie. Will it bring him back into the race?

All I know is these candidates have to pull themselves up into the national debate. If you're running for President, weigh in on the shenanigans in D.C. Give Warren credit, she's stood up against Trump and his crap from the beginning. But when she talked about the number of selfies she'd shot... We hate it when out of touch oldsters try to be young and hip. She'd have been better off talking about the number of likes she had on Instagram, nowhere online do they count the number of selfies.

It was disillusioning.

But on the other side of the aisle, the trials and tribulations of Trump and Rudy...

It's absolutely horrifying.

P.S. If I've forgotten anybody that just means they've got to go. (Oh yeah, Booker...SAYONARA!)


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R&RHOF Nominations-SiriusXM This Week

Tune in today, Tuesday October 15th, to Volume 106, 7 PM East, 4 PM West.

Phone #: 844-6-VOLUME, 844-686-5863

Twitter: @lefsetz or @siriusxmvolume/#lefsetzlive

Hear the episode live on SiriusXM VOLUME: siriusxm.us/HearLefsetzLive

If you miss the episode, you can hear it on demand on the SiriusXM app: siriusxm.us/LefsetzLive


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Brandi Carlile Does Joni Mitchell's Blue

It was a religious experience. The only song I clapped for was "California," otherwise I sat there transfixed, driven deep into my own soul.

How often do you go to a show and know every word, literally?

Joni Mitchell was a known quantity because of "Both Sides Now" and "The Circle Game." Actually, Joni's songs were more famous than she was, until "Court and Spark."

The David Crosby produced "Song To A Seagull" was an insider affair. As in music biz insiders were aware of Joni's greatness, and this record made inroads into the public, but was not well-known, was not a hit, it's something most people only bought in retrospect, after they were hooked by a later album and needed to be completists. But you should listen to it, because it's so personal, it's an excursion into someone else's brain with the lights turned out, it's just the two of you, it's not made for the radio but your bedroom/living room. Listen to "Nathan LaFreneer," about the drive to the airport. You know the experience, at least pre-smartphone, you'd be sitting in the backseat, reading the taxi driver's info on the visor, your mind drifting, really neither here nor there, like so many situations in real life, you're existing, but you're alone in your own mind.

"Clouds" had a more professional producer in Paul Rothchild, and it began Joni's long relationship with engineer Henry Lewy. The album had a cleaner, more immediate sound, and it too began with a quiet number, as opposed to the hit you're supposed to lead with today. And "Clouds" included "Chelsea Morning" and "Both Sides Now," but the essence of the LP was tracks like "I Don't Know Where I Stand."

"Picked up a pencil and wrote 'I love you' in my finest hand
Wanted to send it, but I don't know where I stand"

That's part of being human, wondering whether the other person feels like you do. You're moving through life but they're always on your mind. I was hung up on a woman for about a year, there were signs, connections, I wanted to just call her up and ask her if she felt the way I did.

I didn't.

Then came "Ladies Of The Canyon." The outside producers were gone, for the first time it was a fully Joni statement, and you felt it. This was the album with her recording of the well-known "The Circle Game," but it also included "Big Yellow Taxi" with its lyric that superseded the song, as in..."they paved paradise and put up a parking lot".

The funny thing about "Ladies Of The Canyon" is the truth it contains in retrospect, I got it when I was young, I really get it now.

Like "Conversation."

"Tomorrow he will come to me
And he'll speak his sorrow endlessly and ask me why
Why can't I leave her?"

You're their best friend, their confidante, you're in love with them, but they cannot extract themselves from their relationship, they're weak, they can't handle the change, and if they do, they don't want you. Yup, there's that married woman who called me up and always wanted to hang, I'd go places her husband would not, I tried to push her away and when she finally left him, she didn't want me. She called me from a cellphone in the nineties, she was in the hills, the connection was breaking up and in a moment of static...I told her I loved her.

And then the line dropped.

About a month later I ran into her at the all night electronics store, she was with her new boyfriend, I felt about an inch tall.

"The Arrangement" was about throwing your life away, settling instead of reaching for the brass ring.

"You could have been more
Than a name on the door
On the thirty-third floor in the air
More than a credit card
Swimming pool in the backyard"

"Rainy Night House"... Spending the evening with someone you're not sure where you stand with and the falling droplets leave you in a cocoon, with only your thoughts.

And, of course, there's "The Priest." Just the sound of Joni's guitar sets the scene.

But the song I always remember from "Ladies Of The Canyon" is "For Free," I first heard it performed by James Taylor, when he was dating Joni, before "Ladies Of The Canyon" was released.

"And I play if you have the money
Or if you're a friend to me"

Ask a musician, they always feel like they're being ripped-off, everybody's getting paid, everybody's getting rich but them. They want to play, but they won't unless you pay them. But if you're a friend, they'll play all night, for free, just like me.

Then came "Blue."

There were no hits, it was not legendary at that time, more of an underground thing, for acolytes only.

"For The Roses" was her first album on Asylum, it showed her bare-assed in the gatefold, when that was a big risk for a serious artist.

"For The Roses" actually had something resembling a hit, "You Turn Me On I'm A Radio," but the track was light, not as serious as what Joni's fans were enamored of.

But the two tracks following the "hit" were more serious, they cut to the bone. Joni knew the stars, in "Blonde In The Bleachers" they were all following their dicks.

And at this point, the Joni Mitchell song I play most is "Woman Of Heart And Mind," where she lays it all out honestly.

"I'm looking for affection and respect
A little passion
And you want stimulation, nothing more"

He's on TMZ, she's nowhere to be found in the tabloids.

Then came "Court And Spark." Suddenly "Help Me" and "Free Man In Paris" were all over the radio, suddenly Joni was the hero of every girl in the dorm, "Twisted" had the quality of a Bette Midler song, the illusion was that Joni Mitchell had come down from the mountaintop and was hanging with the hoi polloi. "Court And Spark" was the only LP that evidenced this quality. Joni then took a left turn, went further and further out, she did what she wanted to, not what we wanted her to.

Tonight's concert began with a film, celebrities testifying as to Joni Mitchell's excellence. At points it was excruciating. Who cares what Tom Hanks and his wife have to say about Joni Mitchell? And why was Marilyn Manson included, as a joke? But the highlight for me was Sheryl Crow sitting on her bed singing "Amelia." "Hejira" contains Joni Mitchell's deepest lyrics, but by this time the mainstream audience was gone, only the hard core remained, but "Song For Sharon" contains more wisdom than anything on the hit parade, possibly forever.

"A woman I knew just drowned herself
The well was deep and muddy
She was just shaking off futility
Or punishing somebody
My friends were calling up all day yesterday
All emotions and abstractions
It seems we all live so close to that line
And so far from satisfaction"

Have you ever contemplated suicide? I certainly have. It's these records that have kept me alive, stuff like "Song For Sharon" and "Blue."

My college roommate Lyndon bought "Blue" over the summer. I always had a record on, we even went to sleep to a record, I had a timer to turn the stereo off, but I rarely played "Blue," it was his, not mine, and if you don't own it...you don't own it.

But when I did...

After the movie came an execrable organ solo. It appeared the production just wanted to use the pipe organ...

But the assembled multitude clapped riotously nonetheless.

Then Brandi took the stage.

The audience made me wince. They were busy celebrating Joni Mitchell, giving her a standing ovation when she entered Disney Hall, it was creepy, almost like a living wake, it's like the crowd was there to say they were, kinda like Desert Trip.

But this was no dash for cash, this was a musical event, down to the core.

Yes, the show was an event. It was downtown in a city that plays in the suburbs. There were no kids. And Disney Hall has gravitas. It's an underplay, and it's not a barn. The axiom in music is that fans will show up for their favorite acts anywhere, and this is true, but certain venues add to the performance, are an artistic element unto themselves, like Frank Gehry's legendary creation.

And Brandi was wearing a blue suit. And she was upbeat, she was not solemn, she was treating the audience like her friend, but when she began to sing...

Now what we usually get is people covering others' songs badly. You know, those terrible cover/tribute albums.

And then there are the "artists" who insist on remaking, rearranging the number, making it their own and making the song lose its essence.

Brandi was faithful. Same arrangements. She was singing Joni Mitchell. But first and foremost Brandi Carlile can SING! Early in the show she wowed us with her vocal workings and there was spontaneous applause in the middle of a number. This was not someone saying lyrics cover a mediocre voice, this was not a melisma-master proving to us that they can sing louder and higher than anybody else, this was an artist, doing her work, someone who had a skill and developed it.

I can't sing that way.

But I did sing along with "California."

But I'm getting ahead of myself.

I played "All I Want" after my first date with Felice. I was home in my house with the stereo turned up loud, dancing. I was finally belonging to the living, after sixteen years in the wilderness after my ex left.

And during "My Old Man" I heard the lyrics I've quoted my entire life:

"We don't need no piece of paper
From the city hall
Keeping us tied and true"

This has been my mantra since I heard this song. I quoted it to my ex, who insisted on getting married, to my detriment, and to Felice, whom I'm still not married to fifteen plus years later. She's got more money than I have, neither of us have kids, we're already too old, why do we need a piece of paper? Furthermore, divorce was so painful, I don't want to go through it again.

And then come "Little Green," "Carey" and "Blue."

Now it's clear, I'm on a trip, I can see where I once was and where I now am. I'm back in college, disaffected and disconnected. I'm in Disney Hall right now. I'm fully alive, everything outside the building no longer matters. All those bozos spewing fake facts...Joni Mitchell's truth supersedes them. Then again, she triumphed in a different era, when being a musician was enough, and you weren't a brand, when you didn't sell your soul, when the adulation of your fans was enough when you got it right.

Then came "California."

I sat still, like I said above, I didn't even clap, I couldn't. For me, this is how it used to be, I went to the show not to shoot selfies, not to pat myself on my back, but to be alone, engaging with the music. When done right, the music spoke my life and kept me going. Nothing does this better than "Blue."

When "California" came out I was still living on the east coast.

But I wanted to move to the Golden State since I was in single digits, I used to beg my mother. It's better out here, always has been, you're free, where you went to college, who your parents are, that's all b.s., society is level, everybody's got a story, oftentimes untrue, and after a while we see who is real and makes it.

California will take you as you are, that's why everybody hates the state except for its residents. Outsiders want you to kowtow to their system, they don't want you to be free, but out here you are.

I know you disagree, I don't care, you don't live here.

But I do. And hearing "California" tonight summed up my life. My dreams, now fulfilled, how great is that? I had to stand and applaud vociferously, even though no one else got up.

And artists are never in step with the straight and narrow, in "California" Joni wants to kiss a Sunset pig. You know what that is? THE POLICE! Today everything's flipped over, yet this music, this truth remains.

"Oh, I am a lonely painter
I live in a box of paints
I'm frightened by the devil
And..."

I'm comfortable in front of the computer screen, put me in front of people...

I was one of the few invited to the backstage party, I wanted to finally meet Brandi in the flesh. I know Elton, I've even hung, however briefly, with Joni Mitchell a number of times, but what am I gonna say back there, who am I gonna be? I'm really the guy in these songs, lonely, kept alive by these records, I want to be inside but I'm outside, I know, it's a conundrum, but talk to artists and you'll find...

Most feel the same way.

"The last time I saw Richard was Detroit in '68
And he told me all romantics meet the same fate someday
Cynical and drunk and boring someone in some dark cafe"

The hit parade is niche. Yup, the Spotify Top Fifty, the songs in the "Billboard" charts mean less than ever, today it's about being a musician, that's one of the reasons why tonight's show was so great, it was all about the playing, there was no live transmission, you can't even make any money at Disney Hall, it was for the music and only the music, and those who grew up with "Blue" in their hip pocket know this.

But it's not 1971 anymore. There's war, but most people are not against it. You can have sex, but you might die from it. You can follow your dream, but you can't even pay for a roof over your head and you'll find yourself years behind if you ever want to get on the escalator.

Joni made it, deservedly so. But many more did not. They starved, lived off the kindness of friends and strangers, died from the lack of good health care, but we know their songs even if most people do not.

After the Beatles the goal was to become rich and famous.

Now, even if you make it, you're not that rich, as for being famous...most people have no idea who you are, or if they do, you're only a face, a name, they don't know your work, and it used to be all about the work.

I could tell you who was in the band. Russ Kunkel was behind the kit. I think Brandi said one of the string players was Scarlet Rivera.

But that's not the kind of evening it was. We were all in thrall to the almighty sound, these songs.

Too often in life, I've been alone, blue. I'll tell you the truth, it gets better as you get older, but then you get to a point where it all becomes meaningless, you realize everyone's gonna die and almost no one will be remembered, so what exactly are you living for, what exactly are you trying to achieve.

It's like I tell my shrink, I was heading for the target but then they blew up the target. I wanted to reach everybody, an antidote to the b.s., but now no one can reach everybody, and as a result of cacophony, it's hard to reach anybody, you're lucky if you have an audience at all.

But it used to be different. Like tonight. We had to stick our smartphones in Yondr cases. No one could interrupt the show with their phones because they were locked up.

But this made you bored. Before the show, I read nearly every word in the L.A. Phil's program, even though I was not interested in most of it. Then again, the more I read, the more I got perspective, Disney Hall is spectacular, maybe it would be cool to come to some of these classical shows and set my mind free.

And word was they were going to start promptly at eight. So I was in my seat about ten minutes before. But the show didn't begin until 8:15, what was I gonna do with the time?

And when the show began there were no distractions, only the sound and yourself, that's all. And with everybody there, I became more isolated, I guess it's my personality, I've never been a member of the group.

But I do feel the power of the music. And that's why people resonate with my writing, when I get it right. Most people will tell you what happened, but they won't tell you how it FELT!

How did it feel?

Like I was listening to one of the greatest albums of all time by someone who could do a faithful rendition, a loving rendition, when the original will never ever do this again, this was my only chance.

And the thing about "Blue," despite its title, is it's not all downbeat, it's all over the emotional map, like real life, like me. How is it you can be down in the dumps and feel like king of the universe a second later? I wish I could tell you, but I haven't got any answers, other than to tell you that life is worth living for.

But the truth is in this narcissistic world, if you're lucky you can count on one or two people.

And the records. Set in amber. That's why you shouldn't remix them. They're cultural artifacts, as important as the Dead Sea Scrolls. You wouldn't clean up those documents, saying the writers would have wanted them better, if only they had the time and new technology...huh?

But "Blue" is perfect, it does not need to be redone. All we have is the record, we can sing the songs, but the essence is on that vinyl, the way it was originally cut, we're lucky we've still got it, that "Blue" wasn't on Universal and burned up by executives who believe they're bigger than the artists and the music is just made for consumption and then is worthless, used up, and might as well be discarded.

I knew Joni Mitchell penetrated when Prince covered "A Case Of You." A great song is a great song, and the truth is they're damn hard to write, almost impossible. Very few have the skill. They worked hard to achieve it and then they reach the pinnacle and then...

Then what?

I could have told you who I saw, make you feel envious of my insider status, but the truth is I don't feel like an insider and I'm no better than you.

But I was privileged to be there for Brandi Carlile's knockout performance tonight, nailing one of the most meaningful albums of all time.

That was the flight tonight. The winds were in from Santa Ana. We were drinking the sweet champagne of music, we had the headphones up high, we numbed out the world, we got it out of our mind, all we had left was "Blue."

And that's enough.


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Monday, 14 October 2019

Demonization

The Democrats are so dumb. They let the Republicans define the debate.

Now the offender is California. It's an uninhabitable wasteland filled with homeless that has no affordable housing. Taxes are high and the state is about to crater. THEN WHY ARE SO MANY PEOPLE LIVING HERE?

The homeless problem is a national one. Tracing back to Carter deinstitutionalizing the mentally ill and Reagan cutting the support for those released. Furthermore, as a result of the evisceration of social services (did you read the article in today's WSJ that Arkansas cut the Medicaid of those not working and 18,000 now have no insurance even if they're chronically ill?) people can't make it here, never mind going bankrupt as a result of health issues.

Screw 'em. That's what the right says.

But these are in Republican states, not California.

Why are rents so high in San Francisco? Because everybody wants to move there for the opportunity, you can make so much money in tech. They're not moving to the hinterlands.

Is it tough to make it in the city today?

OF COURSE! It's like making it in Hollywood, it's always been this way.

Or, should I say try finding an apartment for $500 in Manhattan. No can do. Why? Because the rich got richer because of low/no taxes.

As for the homeless in Los Angeles...THEY MOVED HERE FOR THE WEATHER! They're smarter than those living in dying areas as their income goes down, but as a result of predatory lending they now owe more than their house is worth and they can't afford to move. But you need to blame the Democrats for that...they didn't lower taxes enough on the rich so jobs could trickle down to the poor. HUH?

But the right has proffered this canard for decades.

They've just got a better infrastructure, better game than the Democrats. The Democrats excoriate each other, the Republicans, although fewer in number, team up and fight against the Democrats, oftentimes with falsehoods, and what do the Democrats do? Cringe and cry!

Look at today's NYT. With the definitive statement on pollution. Emissions went up everywhere, but in Los Angeles, they went down 2% per person since 1990. The vaunted Texas, the home of the so-called "miracle"? Dallas-Fort Worth went up 27% per person, San Antonio 39% and Houston 22%. But the bozo in chief says we can't have strict emission standards in California, it's illegal, we must relax our emission standards, what...SO THAT PEOPLE CAN DIE?

Yup, you can't drink the water because of the politicians... Did it ever occur to you that you might pay the price of auto emissions and lead in water?

It's like we need a secret Democratic committee to counteract the bias/b.s spewed by the Republicans. I know, because I hear it every damn day! The Republicans train their acolytes to bite back, to work the refs, the Democrats train their acolytes to be silent, to believe the system is fair and will work for them and we should all get along while we argue about trigger warnings in elite institutions...don't want to offend little Oliver and Mackenzie.

Meanwhile, the government says we should stop subsidizing electric cars while we continue to subsidize gas and oil companies. Huh? Ever hear about looking towards the future? Fewer emissions, fewer health problems. As for the production of that electricity...yes, that might be polluting, but electric cars are so much more efficient. That's science, I could explain it to you but you don't want to believe it, you believe emotions trump facts, like that doofus in the White House who sacrificed the Kurds. Know-nothings yield bad results. Are their smart people who take advantage? OF COURSE! But does that mean we have to demonize the educated, that we should all drop out of high school to be on the same level? Education pays dividends. But Republicans say college can't be free, because we're gonna have to pay more taxes. SO WHAT? It's for the good of the country, and those who take advantage and go to college. I've been paying for schools for decades and I've got no kids, but you don't hear me saying I want my money back. I want a better society, I don't want to build an electric fence around my house so those without won't rob me.

But the Republicans have it all down. As in upside down. If this was a sporting contest, the Republicans would say despite being behind 3-2, they won, isn't that what gerrymandering is about?

And the right knows people are too dumb to look ahead, so they start the Federalist Society and populate our courts with right-wingers.

It's every person for themselves in the U.S., the self-professed "greatest country in the world." I don't hate America, I want it to be BETTER! Imagine if Steve Jobs couldn't criticize his engineers, couldn't inspire them to improve their products... Out goes the iPod, the iPhone... As for BlackBerry, the company was too dumb to realize that people would want to do more than send messages on their hand-held device, the company was superseded and is now on life support.

Make America Great Again, by going back to the past? The world goes forward, not backward. There are innovations, not holdbacks.

But no one will say all this. They'll just ignore the taunting until it's perceived to be true.

Hillary Clinton? A crook responsible for our soldiers getting killed! She's a pariah I say, we need someone squeaky clean and upfront who will run our country in an open, honest way, like Trump. HUH?

As for the impeachment road...

The right has its talking point, that the left is sore about losing the election and has been trying to get rid of Trump since day one. Does the left fight back about this? OF COURSE NOT!

And then there's the canard that the Democratic House is holding back legislation? Huh? That's like saying a battered wife deserved it.

Everywhere you go, you've got righties with these talking points.

As for the left, the rank and file are oftentimes uneducated on the issues and can't answer these obvious falsehoods.

WHAT A COUNTRY!


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Today's Trump

You can't fight your battles alone.

The Donald is making a major mistake making news every day, refusing to cooperate with Congress, he's hanging it out for everybody to see. In other words, press can work for or against you.

In this case it's against.

Who is on Trump's team?

His base.

Fox News.

And Republican Representatives and Senators.

His base does best when it lives in a bubble. But the more Trump drags his issues to the forefront, the more his base is aware of them.

As for Fox News... Shepard Smith resigning did more to cement the viewpoint that the channel is biased than any rantings and ravings by the left.

As for those in Congress... Trump is so busy saving himself, that he's forgotten about them.

Now most people don't pay attention to the nitty-gritty of politics, they'd rather live their lives. Ask them who their Representative is, ask them who represents them in state politics and many people will draw a blank. They count on elected officials to do their bidding for them, they're getting paid, why should I pay attention?

But Trump has made politics the story of the day. He's trumped not only movies, TV and music, but even tech. No, the story today is all Trump all the time.

To his detriment.

Take this Kurds/Turkey/Syria/Iran/Russia story. Not only is there no way he looks good, acting on impulse without preparation, his own party was against removing U.S. troops. These same Congresspeople who were afraid of Trump. How long until they flip?

It's going to happen instantly.

The media is always fighting the last war. Yes, 2016 illustrated that there was anger with the elites, against globalization, that the downtrodden and racist wanted to return to what theoretically once was and never will be.

Shocked by the results in 2016, positively shocked I tell you, the media is now bending over backward to pay fealty to these people. Warren is too far left! What they don't understand is America is looking for LEADERS!

Trump is a leader. Whether he's going in the right direction is debatable. And over fifty percent of Americans now favor impeachment and removal, and what does the Donald do? Pour gasoline on the fire! Do you think those already convinced to get rid of him like being insulted by the Donald day after day? Furthermore, those people talk to others and the number favoring him gone increases.

And for all of this America First b.s... It's a conundrum. People on the right don't want to spend money on others, but they do want America to be perceived as the greatest country in the world. The irony, of course, is that that takes money. There's no way to look at the Turkey situation other than as a great gift to Putin. Irrelevant of interference in our elections, only Trump is positive about the dictator. People are still scared of Russia, they don't want the nation to have more power, they don't want the balance of power to shift from the U.S./Europe to Russia/China/Mideast. So on one hand they want to ignore them, but on the other they don't want them to have more power than us.

Now other nations don't believe us, don't trust us, and everything Trump keeps saying is the reverse. America is not great again, with its tariffs and tax giveaways, and now it's losing its power. All those people chanting USA!, USA!, used to laugh at other nations, not so much now.

So the media keeps saying the tail is wagging the dog. That every elected official is subservient to the voter. Nothing could be further from the truth. The voters don't know what they want, they vote against their interests and can be more easily swayed than perceived. An elected official cannot change their mind, but a voter certainly can.

Voters want the impossible. They want all the services, all the safety, and they want it for free. They can see that Trump can't deliver this. As for the Democrats...only Warren and Sanders can get the messaging right. We want someone to pull us out of this mess so we don't have to think about it anymore.

That's the prevailing sentiment in the country...let's get back to regular business. Kinda like England re Brexit, talk to inhabitants of the U.K., they just don't want to live in limbo anymore. But they all still have complaints. They want to put the reins in the hands of someone who cannot only fix the mess, but lead into the future. As for "trust me"... No one trusts anyone anymore.

So Trump is making news every damn day. And he supports people until he hangs them out to dry. Giuliani?? If he's indicted, the Donald will say how bad Rudy is, that he was a rogue actor and Trump had no idea, positively no idea.

Politics was always about the team. But Trump blew that paradigm apart. Because those in charge of the team refused to change. It's like the MLB sitting by raising prices while the NBA captured hearts and minds.

So the Democrats hamstrung Bernie in 2016. So what does Warren do this time around? SHE SAYS SHE'S GONNA PLAY NICE! She's gonna work for the party and its candidates. That's right you co-opt them before they co-opt you.

Donald's strategy didn't work. He pointed out the flaws of his competitors in 2016. He employed an internet/Twitter campaign when others were still using fax. Trump is a signpost that the game has changed, but he's playing it very badly.

This was one of the problems with Obama, he was in the right position but he played the game poorly. He tried to make peace with people who wanted no peace, i.e. the Republicans. He should have negotiated behind closed doors like Johnson, or shamed his opponents, as Trump has done. Instead, Barack was living in a bygone era, that's how we got into this mess. No one acknowledged the pitfalls of globalization, no one fought back against the rise of Republicans in state legislatures, it was positively kumbaya until Bernie challenged Hillary. End result? The Democrats nominated Hillary and she lost. She campaigned for business as usual when people didn't want this. And you just couldn't relate to her, she was neither fish nor fowl. You couldn't connect with Trump either, but at least he spoke English (however poorly) as opposed to gobbledygook and he said he was rich, and in today's America, rich people rule.

But now it's 2019.

People are pissed.

But we keep hearing no one will abandon Trump.

Look at sports. People love a player until he does not deliver in the clutch, then they're in the doghouse and have to redeem themselves.

What has Trump delivered? Forget those who say he's on the right path, they just want to make you go crazy, deep down inside they know he's a buffoon balloon with the gas billowing out. Very few will admit they're wrong in public, but in private...

So you capture the flag and run with it. That's what the Democrats should be doing.

As for Trump, he was caught with his hand in the cookie jar and instead of fielding the controversy, he's stonewalling and attacking, he's every bully you ever hated caught red-handed.

As for Adam Schiff and his compatriots, they're afraid of right wing blowback and as a result they don't say or do anything, allowing the right to define them anyway. We're looking for strength. Stand up for your opinion, get in their face. This was what was so great about Anthony Weiner before he blew himself up.

So no one wants to get close to the fireworks. They just want to watch the show. And it's greater than one in any big top.

And Trump is on the wrong side of almost everything and everyone. In the Middle East, with Russia, with farmers...he's alienating everyone. Sure, he's got his seconds, blowhards like Hannity, Ingraham and Tucker, but there are mothers who defend children who have raped and killed. Some people are never gonna change.

We're fighting for the heart and soul of our country. Are we gonna let Trump get away with it?

Of course not!

Which is why the impeachment and removal numbers keep going up. As for Republican Congresspeople... Ever read Shakespeare? Are you aware of plots to bring the king down? Do you think Moscow Mitch and his cronies are gonna sit by and refuse to take action?

When it's clear that the boss doesn't care about you, is willing to cut you loose, you look out for yourself. First we had Cohen. Then we had Scaramucci. They played the game and lost, they realized they got screwed, now the knife has turned around.

Gonna happen in Congress too, just you wait.

As for the media?

It'll be serving false equivalencies, deep down in the weeds until the action happens. Sometimes you can be so busy fighting the battle that you don't see the war.

Trump is toast. Over. Done. It's just a matter of when.

It's going to happen very quickly. He's stuck in quicksand, and the only way you can get out is with help.

No one wants to help him.

Not enough to keep him in office.

They want to watch him sink and then say how they never supported him to begin with, that he was a liar who pulled the wool over their eyes.

And then they'll go back to attacking Democrats.

It'll be business as usual until someone more sane takes charge and leads.

But the Democrats want to shoot their leaders.

But the little girls (and boys!) understand.

There must be some way out of here, said the joker to the thief...


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