
In recent news, JK Rowling revealed that Dumbledor, the headmaster of the school for nerds, is gay. This affects me in the same way that the revelation that Perry White was gay or that Mrs. Claus is a card-carrying, carpet-munching lesbian.
But I’d like to take this opportunity to make a revelation of my own. I do not enjoy the Harry Potter movies in the slightest bit. Or rather, I enjoy them to the same degree that I enjoy an episode of Scooby-Do: where our heroes are in spooky situations that emulate danger but you’re never really convinced they’re in any real sort of danger. It’s a cartoon. Sure, when Shaggy and Scooby pull a Bugs Bunny on the monster and play cards with him or whatever, it’s funny and everything. After all, we all know it’s just old man Jenkins in a hazmat suit. What’s the big deal?
That’s the sense I get when I watch a Harry Potter movie. They’re basically Disney flicks. False danger plus whimsy equals pre-adolescent fans buying your book as well as a movie ticket. Well, the movies are lame. Admittedly, I have not read any of the books. But then, I haven’t read any Hardy Boys mysteries in dozens of years because my tastes, for what they are, have matured. I’m not going to learn anything about the human condition by watching a Harry Potter movie and I’m not interested in the entertainment value that following a bunch of magical English teenagers obviously brings.
A video of my boys…
This story confirms the fact that Al Gore does not have an interest in running for President in 2008.
I’m reminded of a passage from the 1995 book “Late Shift” by Bill Carter, which tells the tale of the late night talk show host swapping that resulted from Johnny Carson’s retirement announcement. In it, David Letterman, who basically stood on the sidelines while Jay Leno took the job Letterman always wanted, received a less-than-stellar offer from NBC to take the job over for Leno at some point in the future. Letterman’s people offered this advice:
…and yet because he knew Dave so well, [manager Peter Lassally] knew how badly Dave wanted to say yes, so that he could have the show he always wanted, even on these third-rate terms. Lassally’s greatest fear was that after all this, after the thrill of having most of the television industry at Dave’s feet begging to win him over, after the elation at the CBS deal, it was going to be another Dave disaster. It was going to be Dave not listening to the people around him again. And so he called Dave at home that Saturday and argued the points with him. There was no upside, he told Dave. “It’s damaged goods,” Lassally said. “You’re not taking over for Johnny Carson. You’re taking over for a show that no longer has any class. That’s not worth anything, that’s not any kind of a victory. We can start from scratch at CBS and it will be your victory and it will be your show and not you’re not taking over for this damaged show.”
Clearly, Dave is Al Gore.
Peter Lassally is Gore’s “people” or maybe Gore’s conscience.
The television industry is the Democratic party.
The CBS deal is the Global Warming campaign/Nobel Prize.
Johnny Carson is Bill Clinton.
And the show? Well, the show is America.
Gore never actually says anything to make such a collinearity feasible, I’m doing all the inferring here. But I feel I’m at least partially on the money. Gore has every right to choose not to head the democratic party once again because they lack the backbone to really support themselves.
With the school shooting in Ohio yesterday, we’ve officially moved into the copycat phase of the shooting in Wisconsin, which, one could argue, is itself a copycat of the Virginia Tech shooting which is a copycat of Columbine (as they all are, to an extent), which is, technically, a copycat of Charles Whitman at University of Texas in 1966. **
** There have been a dozen or so incidents since Columbine, merely 3 of which are listed here, so it’s probably a very hearty debate about which inspired the other.
The point is this: it all ties together in this American gun culture where profit trumps common sense and American lives. You think the NRA defends their position JUST because of the 2nd Amendment? As in: ONLY because of the 2nd Amendment? Uhh, no. Guns are big business in this country.
Here is a popular NRA argument: a person can use a car to commit vehicular homicide, yet should we ban cars? The truly scary thing about this argument is the fact that it makes perfect sense to some people.
I particularly liked the comment “…divorced themselves from reason.” Nice!
This site now works with Internet Explorer 7. I still say it is an inferior browser and I encourage everyone to download Firefox. But whatever. Enjoy IE-ers!
As of last night, mixing/mastering has been completed for all 29 songs that I’m releasing next month. 22 of them will appear on 2 CDs (Choppa City and Pseudo Placebo), 6 will be website “freebies,” and 1 is already on the Jack Ruby’s Alibi Myspace page (Hovercraft Acoustic). Over 5 years, I’d written something like 50 songs and through the process of separating the wheat from the chaff, I’d come up with 29 release-worthy tunes, which isn’t too shabby a ratio.
I’d like to make a special mention of the Mixer/Mastering Engineer I hired, Bryan McGee. Bryan came on-board after I posted a call for help on the TapeOp message boards back in January of this year.
Many talented people responded including a big-shot Los Angeles M/M Engineer. I sent my “sample” mix to about 6 of them just to see what they could do with it. It’s amazing how many different ways a final mix can sound when you get different people to fiddle with the raw mix. It’s that special something that an M/M Engineer brings. In fact, I’ll go so far as to say that getting a good Engineer is just as important as getting a good drummer or bassist.
Bryan McGee, a young kid from Philly, was the one I went with. This young man pretty much nailed the sample mix (Allison, which you can listen to on MySpace) and I also got a sense as to how he’d respond to feedback & suggestions, which was important, especially for an opinionated fellow such as myself.
The mixng/mastering of Pseudo Placebo was first and it went fairly smoothly. About half of those songs have merely 2 sound sources (tracks) and those sort of jobs are comparatively easy to mix/master. PP was done in April or so.
Choppa City was the real challenge, largely because the songs on CC were more complex and also because of external factors. Bryan got started on CC in May.It was going pretty slowly, which was mostly of my own creation due to my constant suggestions & getting Bryan to tweak this & that. But still, it was taking a while so I decided to speed things along by doing what I normally do: throw money at it. I offered Bryan some more money and a deadline. The thinking was that he’d accept the money & make the deadline. To my amazement, he said “no” to the money and was nearly 2 weeks ahead of the deadline. I don’t know anyone that would do that. I’m still kind of amazed.
So take a moment to visit Bryan at polarpattern.com and meet a professional with a remarkable work ethic. And I think he has the full 5 minute version of Allison on his website.
So anyway, the next step is to prepare the final master CDs to ship to the manufacturer. It’ll be a limited run because these days, CDs just aren’t being purchased. The real deal is getting them on iTunes, for which there is a minimum 6 week backlog. So all these tunes should be actually up & ready by Christmas.