There are other days…

A  Stranger In The Room

Some days, you feel assertive and directed. We’re going to fight against the forces of ignorance and evil. The tide will turn if we spend enough time informing people about what’s happening.

There are other days when you feel exhausted. I was scrolling through Facebook and saw a poster, not the one above, but a picture with dialogue from the movie A Face In The Crowd with Andy Griffith. It’s an excellent film, by the way, and you should see it. I didn’t know until I started Googling that there was a 2024 London production story involving Elvis Costello.

“Stop me if you think you have heard this one before: A man gains television fame on the strength of his purported connection to everyday Americans and their resentment of elites, and before long he converts that fame into political influence in a right-wing presidential campaign…”

Of course, we’ve been here before: January 20, 2017, and the months preceding and following. Not incidentally, TCM aired A Face in the Crowd on rump’s first Inauguration Day. In 2015, CNN asked if the film predicted his rise.

Version 2

This time, it’s more complicated because so much stuff is coming. Here’s a list of the Executive Orders. Restoring Names That Honor American Greatness contains a certain amount of gonzo entertainment. Is he going to have a whole bunch of trees chopped down? More or less. 

What’s going on at Social Security? Even career officials are unclear, but expect “‘DOGE people are learning and they will make mistakes, but we have to let them see what is going on at SSA,’ the acting SSA commissioner, Lelan Dudek, told senior staff” and others.

Are the tariffs on or off? It depends on the day of the week. The tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and China would cost the typical US household over $1,200 annually. But they become functionally a tax on the poor, with the people with the least income disproportionally harmed, but the top 20% are faring well.

DOGE moves to cancel NOAA leases on key weather buildings. “Why it matters: One of the buildings is the nerve center for generating national weather forecasts. It was designed to integrate multiple forecasting centers in one building to improve operating efficiency. It houses telecommunications equipment to send weather data and forecasts across the U.S. and abroad.” On this last topic, I’ve read online, “Oh, private forecasters will provide this for us!” And where do you think they are getting the bulk of their data?

Meanwhile, FOTUS and Juvie Vance Pulled an Old Hollywood Trick on Zelensky. “By letting his vice president instigate the Oval Office blowup with the Ukrainian leader, [he] resorted to a time-worn industry technique veteran screenwriter calls ‘A  Stranger In The Room.'”

It’s not the individual acts but the tsunami of actions that are impossible to track. The answer is yes when people ask whether we could run our government more efficiently. But this isn’t efficient; this is taking a hacksaw to it.

And yet

This story from Axios gave me a modicum of hope. 

In a chaotic and unpredictable world, the federal government normally acts as a stabilizing force. Under Trump, it has become the primary driver of the chaos.

The big picture: Across-the-board tariffs on Mexico and Canada — two of America’s three largest trading partners — have been on and then off and then on and then off. Colombia knows the feeling.

The Hamilton cancellation at the Kennedy Center, after FOTUS put himself in charge, is getting under his supporters’ skins. Some companies are NOT backing off from DEI initiatives. (Hegseth was ridiculed as Enola Gay photos were swept up in DEI purge over the word ‘gay’.)

The pushback is starting against these mean-spirited and incompetent people doing, quoting Canada’s Trudeau quoting the Wall Street Journal, “very dumb things.” Those protests at town halls, especially with Republican members of Congress, are having an effect. A  House Democrat is planning a ‘Bad DOGE Act’. Even GOP senators are telling Musk that DOGE actions will require their votes. This means Congress is waking up to the fact that they, per Article I of the Constitution, actually have a say in the process, that it is not an imperial presidency. 

Sunday Stealing — Countdown from 5

1100 Wordle games

The Sunday Stealing this week is Countdown from 5.

FIVE people who mean the world to you.

  1. My daughter is studying abroad in South Africa for a semester. On Friday, my birthday, I talked to her for about two hours on WhatsApp, during which she talked about all sorts of adventures she’s experiencing.

2. My two sisters called me on Friday.

3. One of my oldest friends, whom I have only known since kindergarten, called me on Friday.

4. The 200 odd – and they are odd! -people who either messaged me on Facebook or commented on my blog on Thursday through today to wish me a happy birthday

5. My wife took me to dinner on Friday at a nice restaurant only a block from our house. By the way, it was extraordinarily windy! As we were leaving, we saw our old buddies Ruth and David. When I reach the end of the year’s survey, it will ask, “What did you do on your birthday?” I will merely point to this post.

FOUR things you fear.

  1.  Global warming, climate change, or whatever term you wish to use, less for me and more for my daughter and my nieces

2. Many people cannot discern the difference between rumor, misinformation, disinformation, and verifiable facts; it is usually possible to do so.

3. The inequitable distribution of wealth and access to food and basic medical care allow diseases that should be eradicated to exist. Hear John Green read the first chapter of Everything Is Tuberculosis, his seventh book. Read Working-Class Americans Live Seven Fewer Years Than The Rich. 

4. The disintegration of democracy in the United States and Europe

Hayes, Andrews, Williams, Bell, Richards

THREE words to describe how you feel right now.

  1. Hyperbolicsyllabicsesquedalymistic

2. Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious

3. HappyHappyHappy

TWO things you’re excited about.

  1. The project

2.

I completed another 100 Wordle games early Saturday morning, with zero ones, 10 twos, 41 threes, 41 fours, eight fives, zero sixes, and, most importantly, zero sevens, taking an average of 3.47 turns. 

ONE thing you’d like to say to someone.

  1. I Love Everybody, especially you.

Blast off! 

“Thank you for playing! Please come back next week.”

Women in music history

Kassiani

I usually post music on Saturdays. Today is also International Women’s Day, which was created in large measure to commemorate actions involving labor and suffrage. The first hits I found in a search for “Women in music history”:

THE HISTORY OF WOMEN IN MUSIC, 2022.

“In the history of music, sisters have always been doing it for themselves.” This refers to the Aretha/Eurythmics song, Sisters Are Doin’ It For Themselves.

“The first female composer, according to the history books, was Kassiani, an 8th Century nun, who composed Byzantine chants.

“However, women have rarely been given the same accolades and recognition as their male counterparts, and have often faced greater challenges to have their voices heard.

“In this overview, we look at who is the most successful woman in music, what percentage of musicians are female, and why it’s still challenging for women to be successful in the music industry.

“Plus, we’ve profiled the most revolutionary, pioneering, influential and unique female artists, composers and producers through history.

“Load up our Kick Ass Women playlist for inspiration as you read…

Lists

Trailblazing Women in Music History You Should Know, 2023, PBS

Most Influential Female Musicians: 40 Trailblazing Women, 2023

27 of The Most Influential and Pioneering Women in Music History, 2016

The lists were rather diverse, and there was far less overlap than I had thought. Some women who showed up on more than one list:

Sister Rosetta Tharpe – This Train

Linda Ronstadt – Long Long Time

Missy Elliott – Gossip Folks

Patsy Cline – Lovesick Blues

Dusty Springfield – The Look of Love

Tina Turner – Better Be Good To Me

The blogger turns 72

eastern part of St. Lawrence County

The blogger turns 72. He likes the number 72; it’s 2 ^3 * 3 ^2. Who can’t love that, arithmetically speaking? So, of course, this means that 72 is divisible by 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 12, 18, 24, and 36.

“New York State Route 72 (NY 72) is a 15.36-mile-long (24.72 km) state highway in the North Country of New York. The road is an east–west highway located entirely within the eastern part of St. Lawrence County.”

I will remember how old I am. Probably. Remembering 71 was hard, 70 was easy, and 73 will be terrible. 

As I’ve hinted at, I’m working on a project. I won’t tell you what it is yet.

One of the things that fascinated me was that when we were working on getting the daughter to go to South Africa, we had this god-awful list of things to do before she could get her visa. I realized that it took up an inordinate amount of psychic energy. It wasn’t just the time it took directly. Other tasks fell by the wayside even when I wasn’t doing anything about the visa.

Double-billed

At the beginning of February, I had two different Medicare supplement policies in effect, which I couldn’t have. When I applied through an intermediary, I thought they would tell the earlier one that I was no longer interested in using them. That was not the case, so money for both policies came from my checking account, making me feel very poor. I had to write a letter to the old company saying, “I don’t want you anymore. Give me back the two months of payments I made.”

There were bills I was late in paying. I was working on getting speakers for the Albany Public Library book reviews/author talks right up to the very last minute, and I hate doing that. Newspapers, which don’t take that long to read the newspapers, went untended. 

So January was pretty much a bust in terms of what I wanted to achieve, but life is semi-normal – whatever the heck that means.

The picture I took on January 31st is a selfie, and I hate selfies. I despise them, particularly when I needed a haircut, but there was no time. I suppose I could take another one, but meh!

Rico and Becky married 20 years (tomorrow)

Rebecca Jade and Rico Curtis

Rico and Rebecca in the center, at a birthday party for Rebecca, October 2024

I’m having one of those “It can’t be that long ago” moments. Rico and Becky married 20 years ago in San Diego 2 on March 7th, 2005. It was a Monday.

Who gets married on a Monday? Why March 7th? When she played basketball for UC Berkeley, her uniform number was 5. Rico’s number when he played football in college and later professionally was 37. 3/7/05. And the service was supposed to start at 3:57 p.m., though it was about 23 minutes late.

Becky’s uncle Roger came from Albany. My wife stayed home to care for our almost-one-year-old newborn. We knew a transcontinental flight with an infant who didn’t travel well was ill-advised.

I didn’t have a blog in March 2005; I started it two months later. So, I wrote an extensive piece about the wedding around their 1st anniversary.

Wipeout

The next time I saw Rico, and the first time my wife and daughter did, was on television. In September 2010, Becky and Rico were in a competition program called Wipeout. A host dubbed them Thunder and Lightning, which was quite weird. At 2:36 in this video, Rico really excelled. If you have Hulu, you can watch the whole show: season 3, episode 16. 

My daughter met Rebecca at my mother’s funeral. However, my wife and daughter finally met Rico when he and Rebecca attended my cousin Anne’s Thanksgiving dinner in 2013 in New Rochelle, New York.  Now that I think of it, I have seen Rico only once since, in 2018, when sister Leslie had her bicycle accident

Of course, Rebecca’s been singing, and we got to see her near Elmira and in New Haven in 2024. Rico is involved in real estate.

I’m happy that Rebecca and Rico traveled extensively together because of her singing. They started in Greece and the eastern Mediterranean for the Dave Koz tour, then Portugal for an event, and Indonesia for the Java Jazz Festival in Jakarta.

I wish them both a happy 20th anniversary tomorrow. I always remember the date because it’s also my birthday!

Don’t forget to vote daily for Rebecca Jade in the San Diego Music Awards in the category #21, Best R&B, Funk or Soul Song, Evan Marks & Rebecca Jade – Hello It’s Me.

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