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NOSE CONE

"It's called The American Dream because you have to be asleep to believe it." -- George Carlin

"Someplace between apathy and anarchy is the stance of the thinking human being. He does embrace a cause, he does take a position, and can't allow it to become business as usual. Humanity is our business." -- Rod Serling

3/26/2005

I met the Stars of Lipstick & Dynamite!

Last night at Angelika I attended the premiere of "Lipstick
& Dynamite" and was fortunate to be able to meet the women
interviewed in the film as they greeted and signed autographs
after the film. Though I was not acquainted with the world of
women's wrestling prior to the Moonlighters contributing music
for the soundtrack of the film, I am certainly a fan and admirer
of these wonderful ladies now. In participating in their sport
during the 1940's onward, they publicly changed perceptions
of how women could behave, showed everyone that women
could be strong, fearless, empowered and muscular, and really
paved the way for modern women's equality and strength.
I'm so thrilled that the Moonlighters were able to participate
in this fascinating film about these awesome "tough broads".

Here are some photos from the L&D website:



Lipstick & Dynamite Posted by Hello

3/23/2005

Martin Denny 1911-2005

Thursday, March 3, 2005
Musician Martin Denny dies at age 93
By Mike Gordon
Musician Martin Denny, the father of the influential genre of pop called "exotica," died yesterday at home in Hawai'i Kai. He was 93. He was born April 5, 1911 in New York City. Although in fragile health for some time - his doctors told him in 2003 that he had only a year to live - Denny was active and performing until shortly before his death. Denny created a hypnotic international sound that blended exotic elements - bird calls, croaking frogs, jazz rhythms, chimes, & gongs. He once described it as a fusion of Asian, South Pacific, American jazz, Latin American and classical styles. Trained in classical music, he first studied piano at age 10 & was a child prodigy of Lester Spitz and Eleanor Gorn. As a youth, he toured South America with a six-piece band & frequent visits left an mpression - Latin elements infiltrated his exotic sounds.
A favorite in Waikiki in the 1950s & '60s, Denny first played the old Shell Bar at the Kaiser Hawaiian Village Hotel, then moved to clubs such as Don the Beachcomber's, which later became Duke Kahanamoku's, in the International Market Place. Over the years, he performed at the Kahala Hilton, the Hawaiian Regent, Canlis' Restaurant and the Blue Dolphin Club. In 1959, he was named by Billboard, the music industry bible, as "most promising group of the year," nominated for "pianist of the
year" alongside such giants as George Shearing & Ahmad Jamal.
In 1990, the Hawaii Academy of Recording Arts honored Denny
with a Na Hoku Hanohano Lifetime Achievement Award. In a
2003 interview on the eve of a tribute concert at the Hawai'i Theater,
Denny mused on the renewed recognition his music was getting:
"You know, I'm happy the music's back, because I'm frankly tired of hearing the same old thing. Rap music. High-voltage rock 'n' roll," he scoffed. "What will kids today remember 20 years from now? There's hardly anything romantic or melodic. I think a whole lot of good music has been lost."

Memories of Martin Denny 1911-2005
Sunday, March 6, 2005
By Bob Krauss

Let's spend a quiet moment in memory of our mutual friend, Martin Denny — the musician, gentleman and wit who died Wednesday night. A sure test of talent is its staying power and Martin Denny had it. His exotic music has made a comeback after 30 years. But that's not the best reason to remember him.
Martin Denny was, above all, a decent human being. He had every reason to be jealous of Arthur Lyman, his star performer who left the band to make a similar brand of music. Lyman went to the hospital for the last time in 2002. Denny regularly visited him. "I can say that musically Arthur was the best in the Islands and maybe in the world," said Denny. "He had a keen ear for music and a great imagination." Martin didn't try to hog the credit. Another key member of the original group was Augie Colón, the bongo player, who died last year and who may have started the "jungle-sound and bird-call" phenomenon. Denny once remembered that they were inspired by croaking frogs outside the Shell Bar at the old Hawaiian Village where Denny's gang got together. He credited Colón with first imitating birds and a wild boar. "He contributed so much to my career by just being part of it," Denny said.
You have to respect Martin Denny for his marriage. June was a barmaid at the sidewalk bistro where Martin was playing the piano when the jungle sounds propelled him to the Hit Parade. Theirs was a love affair that lasted until she died.
A story Martin loved to tell about himself is the way he was introduced to Hawaiian music. This was during Prohibition, about 1930. Martin was 15 years old, a precocious piano student in New York. He earned $5 playing for an Irish wake, then was hired through a small-time theatrical agent to play at a stag party for the Borden Milk Co.
Martin had never attended a stag party. He said an aging koochy-koochy dancer in a leopard skin came in and said, "Hey, kid, where's the piano player?" Martin confessed that he was. She handed him the sheet music to "On the Beach at Waikiki" and said, "Play it fast."
"I had never seen the piece but I read it at sight at a fast tempo when she went into her act," he said. As the dancer's finale approached, Martin played "On the Beach at Waikiki" as fast as he could. Just at the critical moment, whistles sounded and police officers burst into the room shouting, "It's a raid!" Borden Milk Co. salesmen ran in all directions. The police handcuffed the koochy-koochy dancer. Martin remained at his post, bewildered. A big Irish cop looked at him in disbelief.
"Who the hell are you?"
"The piano player."
"How old are you?"
"Sixteen," Martin lied.
"Get the hell out of here."
Martin said he never got the $5 the theatrical agent promised him and he never forgot "On the Beach at Waikiki."

3/19/2005


Voodoo Suite at Barbes Posted by Hello

3/12/2005


Pete's Candy Store Posted by Hello


bliss Posted by Hello


Pain Teens Posted by Hello


uke Posted by Hello

3/10/2005


Welcome to Dewey Dell Posted by Hello

March Madness

So I'm just wondering, when are we going to hear more in the mainstream press about the gay male prostitute (or should I say "Presstitute"?) Jeff Gannon (aka James Guckert, Johnny Gosch, "Bulldog--8 inches cut"), who had daily access to White House Press conferences, was on a first-name basis with the Presnit, and leaked the fact that Valerie Plame was a CIA covert operative, which is a Federal felony offence?
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=4879


And could there be a worse choice for US Ambassador to the United Nations than John Bolton, walrus-mustachioed neo-hawk and former Secretary of Arms Control? He's a sworn enemy of the UN, Kim Jong-Il of Korea, and basically anyone else who has an opinion opposite his about anything. Is this the right choice for the new "diplomatic" administration? Seems like everything that comes out of the White House is a perfect reverse barometer for what they really plan to do.
'Bolton, who is close to Vice President Dick Cheney, was famously condemned as “human scum” and a “bloodsucker” by the North Korean foreign ministry after he dared to describe Kim Jong Il as a “tyrannical dictator.”'
'North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Il refused to let his negotiators talk to Bolton, saying, "Such human scum and bloodsucker is not entitled to take part in the talks."'
http://mediamatters.org/items/200503080004

Great, so much for "Eastasia". And what about "Eurasia"?

Will Bush apologize for the murder by US troops of Italian Intelligence officer Nicola Calipari as he attempted to shield freed Italian hostage journalist Giuliana Sgrena? She was an unembedded journalist who was one of the first to report on Abu Ghraib, and also reported last November that the US troops had been using napalm in Fallujah, then was mysteriously kidnapped. Seems they had passed thru 7 prior checkpoints when their auto was fired on by US troops without any warning, even though Calipari had a security clearance:
We were on our way to the airport when the tanks started to strike against us and he tried to cover me and he was shot. He died and, me, I was safe but he was dead.
When did you become aware that your car was being fired at?
We had no signal. We were just on the way to the airport. They started to shoot at us without any light or signal. There was no block, there was nothing. It was so immediate. I didn't know how I was alive after all that attack.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4324251.stm