Saturday, April 27, 2024

Robert Kagan opinion pieces

These are a couple of opinion pieces that I want to be able to find again—so I am referencing them here. That's all this post is about.

The first is from November 30, 2023, and titled "A Trump Dictatorship Is Increasingly Inevitable. We Should Stop Pretending." The second is from this Wednesday and is called "We Have a Radical Democracy. Will Trump Voters Destroy It?" The author, Robert Kagan's reasoning seems distressingly sound. The second piece is excerpted from his soon-to-be-released book Rebellion: How Antiliberalism Is Tearing America Apart—Again. 

I have been grappling with the possibility of leaving this country if it collapses into a right-wing autocracy. Kagan is making me think I ought to start packing sooner than later.

So awful.

And I sincerely hope that Kagan is wrong, wrong, wrong.


David Bowie

So I'm surfing FB a bit, and there's a post from my high school alumni group (SAMOHI CLASS of 1972), with a meme: *You can only purchase 1 ticket!* And 9 images—a few of whom I'm so dorky, I don't even know... but the ones I do know are Bob Marley, Prince, David Bowie, X, Michael Jackson, Jimi Hendrix, X, Freddie Mercury, X (this last X being the only female in the lineup, go figure).

Most of the responses are for Jimi. Also Freddie, Marley. Me: David Bowie all the way. In part because I completely missed him back in the day. But the more I've encountered him over the years, the more impressive I find him. 

So yeah, I'd have loved to have seen him perform. Boy and how.

So here are a few performances I've conjured up on YouTube. Just for fun. Or remembrance. 

"Spiders from Mars":

"Heroes" (he gets started around 1:45):
 

"Rebel Rebel":


 "Young Americans":

Oh, okay, here he is with Freddie Mercury, "Under Pressure." Amazing vocalists, both.


 And finally, here he is chatting with Conan O'Brien. He just seemed so *likable*.


David Bowie has been gone eight years now. He died at 69—my age now. He'd be 77 now. He did so much. 


Friday, April 26, 2024

Keith Bymer Jones and Paul Cummins, potters

I've been watching The Great Pottery Throwdown, and each week I am captivated by the technical challenge—which might be a set of three different-sized flower pots or a perfect globe or six identical plates, etc. It's always demonstrated by one of the two main hosts/judges, Keith Bymer Jones. So I thought I'd search him out on YouTube, see if there are any representative features on him. And yes! Of course. But it turns out, he's more than just a potter. He seems to be a British sensation.

Here are a couple of the more pottery-focused features I enjoyed:

And then there's this: 

On the episode I watched this evening, the special challenge was a dozen (ceramic) roses, and the special judge was Paul Cummins, who in 2014, together with Tom Piper and 300 ceramicists, created an installation at the Tower of London commemorating the start of WWI called Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red, featuring a bazillion ceramic poppies—or to be exact, 888,246, each representing a British fatality in that war. Here are some photos:





It's always so thrilling to see passion in action. No mattter what the medium.


Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Curiosity 100: Rhiannon Giddens, musician

Yay, 100! But that's irrelevant, compared to the artist I'm featuring here: Rhiannon Giddens, banjo player, fiddler, and wonderful vocalist. I don't have much to say, except that I learned about her about 20 years ago, via the Carolina Chocolate Drops. And then last night we saw and listened to her perform at our Golden State Theater, and it was amazing. Rhiannon and five others, sometimes six or seven. Roots music, with her minstrel banjo or a Cajun tune or two; music evoking the 1920s; and lots of love (or almost-love) songs.

This song about the experience of being a slave, "Come Love Come," is nicely done in this recorded version, but her performance last night was more powerful, a searing lament. 

Here's her Tiny Desk Concert from three years ago. (She's chatty; keep scrolling if you lose interest. She won't know.)

I felt enriched by Rhiannon's (and the others') passion and talent, and by the American nature of the music. I keep feeling so conflicted over the course this country seems to be taking, which seems so idiotic to me—but then I'm reminded of the many treasures this culture, this diverse culture, has to offer. And I'm glad it's mine. (Then again, talk to me again in November...)

For now, I am so glad we went to hear and see Rhiannon Giddens perform. She's one of those treasures, for sure.


Wednesday, April 17, 2024

Book Report: Erasure

7. Percival Everett, Erasure (2001)

According to Wikipedia, Percival Everett has written 22 novels, many books of short stories and poetry, and a children's book. Why hadn't I heard of him before American Fiction—the movie on which Erasure is based?

Well, it doesn't matter, because now I have heard of him, and I will continue to read him. I loved Erasure: it's smart, it's funny, it's poignant, it's angry, it's fully lived. 

It's the story of Thelonious "Monk" Ellison, a Black writer and critical theorist who becomes fed up with the publishing world and the cubbyholes they'd like to shove him in, and so decides to embrace the stereotype—in full irony. Yet, the irony overtakes him, for the gangsta novella that he quickly writes as something of a sendoff joke becomes celebrated as the "real" thing.

Meanwhile, he is dealing with family issues, and money issues, and job issues. And perhaps most directly, identity issues. 

Immediately after I finished the book, we watched American Fiction. It was okay. But it missed the internal dialogue and a lot of the nuance of the novel (of course). That said, it also made for a different ending than the book did. The book was very much in Monk's head, whereas the movie needed to externalize—and it was allowed, perhaps, a looser play on "fiction" than the book. Both work. Different media.

I loved Everett's writing, and seeing the experience of being Black—by which I mean, an individual American—through his eyes. I flagged many passages. Here are the first few.

Anyone who speaks to members of his family knows that sharing a language does not mean you share the rules governing the use of that language. No matter what is said, something else is meant and I knew that for all my mother's seeming incoherence or out-of-itness, she was trying to tell me something over tea. The way she had mentioned the smoke in the living room twice. Her calling the blue box gray. Her easy and quick capitulation to what it was she and her cronies actually did at their meetings. But since I didn't know the rules, which were forever changing, I could only know that she was trying to say something not what that something was. 

There are times when fishing that I feel like a real detective. I study the water, the lay of the land, seine the streambottom and look at the larvae of aquatic insects. I watch, look for hatches and terrestrial activity. I select my fly, one I've tied at streamside, plucking a couple of fibers from my sweater to mix with the dubbing to get just the right color. I present the fly while hiding behind a rock or in tall grass and wait patiently. Then there are times when I wrap pocket lint around a hook, splash it into the water while standing on a fat boulder. Both methods have worked and failed. It's all up to the trout.

I tried to distance myself from the position where the newly sold piece-of-shit novel had placed me vis-à-vis my art. It was not exactly the case that I had sold out, but I was not, apparently, going to turn away the check. I considered my woodworking and why I did it. In my writing my instinct was to defy form, but I very much sought in defying it to affirm it, an irony that was difficult enough to articulate, much less defend. But the wood, the feel of it, the smell of it, the weight of it. It was so much more real than words. The wood was so simple. Damnit, a table was a table was a table. 

Lately, I've had trouble keeping my attention on a book. This book, though, I had no trouble sticking with. I've now got I Am Not Sidney Poiter on the Kindle. 


Thursday, April 4, 2024

Curiosity 99: Washed Ashore

We spent the last couple of days in Tucson visiting a dear old friend, Trudy. Among other outings, we visited the Tucson Botanical Gardens, which is currently hosting a show of ocean trash. Well, ocean trash artfully reconfigured: as jellyfish, a humpback whale, a puffin, a mako shark, and a rockhopper penguin. Here is what the gardens' website says about the the Bandon, Oregon–based group that provided the oversized sculptures made of junk: 

Washed Ashore: Art to Save the Sea is a non-profit organization committed to combating plastic pollution in the ocean and waterways. In ten years, Washed Ashore has processed over 35 tons of plastic pollution from the Pacific Northwest’s ocean beaches to create over 85 works of art that are awakening the hearts and minds of viewers to the global marine debris crisis. Washed Ashore has exhibited their giant sculptures at many noteworthy venues including the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C.

The Smithsonian exhibit is permanent; others, including, currently, venues in Galveston Island, TX; Brooklyn, NY; and Clearwater, FL, are traveling shows—bringing the message of plastic pollution far and wide. 

The signage included a scavenger hunt: find the lighters, children's toys, flipflops, tires, bottle caps, fishing line, buoys, plastic this, plastic that. There were even some Department of Fish & Wildlife marker-tags on some of the creations.

I took photos.








Trudy and David, with toothy friend

I am skeptical that such "educational" creations convince us humans that we should be more careful with our garbage. But at least the beaches of Oregon are getting cleaned up. And that's certainly a good thing.