Friday, March 18, 2016

Hamilton and "Voodoo" Macbeth

Composed and posted on March 11, 2016

It is not lost on many of us, in this year of a seeming lack of diversity in the Oscar nominations, that there is a phenomenon on Broadway that utilizes a very diverse cast to tell history in a very unusual way.  The phenomenon is called "Hamilton" and it has taken Broadway by storm.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAiEVjW-GNA

Being currently immersed in the 1930s, the Hamilton story harkened  back to a time some 80 years ago, when a young phenom director put on a new version of Shakespeare's Macbeth.  As Wikipedia describes it, the young phenom

"adapted and directed the production, moved the play's setting from Scotland to a fictional Caribbean island, recruited an entirely African American cast, and earned the nickname for his production from the Haitian vodou that fulfilled the rĂ´le of Scottish witchcraft. A box office sensation, the production is regarded as a landmark theatrical event for several reasons: its innovative interpretation of the play, its success in promoting African-American theatre, and its role in securing the reputation of its 20-year-old director."

I do not know what will become of Lin Manuel Miranda, the creator of the hip-hop Hamilton, but it is notable that the 20 year old director the "Voodoo" Macbeth went on, five years later, to direct what most critics consider to be the greatest movie of all time. May the Theater Gods shine on Lin Manuel Miranda so that he too may one day similarly enrich us all.

Peace,

Everett "Skip" Jenkins

Thursday, March 17, 2016

International Women's Day

Composed and posted on March 9, 2016



Yesterday was International Women's Day, a day for action and reflection. 


However, aside from reading about the meaning of the day, I must admit that I did not do too much.  You can read about what more notable (and active) others did and said at 

http://www2.unwomen.org/en/news/in-focus/international-womens-day

As for me, yesterday evening, I confined myself in my evolving "Man-Cave", a space that once was a three car garage and began re-watching one of my favorite television shows ... Star Trek Voyager.  Coming on the heals of my binge watching of the first season of Orange is the New Black, watching Star Trek Voyager with Captain Kathryn Janeway and Chief Engineer B'Elanna Torres, seemed to be a couch potato homage to strong women on International Women's Day. And the fact that Kate Mulgrew is one of the leading actors in both series is perhaps a hint that both series are very, very good.

In any event, I hope others may have had a more productive International Women's Day.  If so, please do tell us about it .  But until then, a belated International Women's Day to everyone ... and may we continue to go where no one has gone before.

Peace,

Everett "Skip" Jenkins

Happy Birthday, Teena Marie

Composed and posted on March 5, 2016

Today is Saturday, March 5, 2016, and it is a day that I normally take a break from writing.  But today is March 5, 2016 and, according to all the authorities I can find, today is the day that Teena Marie, the legendary Lady T, would have turned 60.  So in honor of such a milestone, I feel compelled to break from my silence to host a little birthday party celebration.  First, we begin with the appetizer of Lady T with Donnie Simpson of the Video Soul days belting out "If I Were a Bell"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IHcB0c6BeMs

This is followed by the full course of Lady T's Greatest Hits


and, of course, dessert is Ooh la la


Now, that's an Old School Celebration. Consume and enjoy.  Happy Birthday, Lady T.  Happy Birthday, Indeed!

Peace,

Everett "Skip" Jenkins
Class of 1975

P.S. For those who think we have covered this before, well please also see and know 

Oklahoma Boys

Composed and posted on March 4, 2016


It is time for my weekly music segment, so let's begin...

Once upon a time, I spent a great deal time traveling up and down I-5.  While doing so, I found myself listening to a lot of country music emanating from such towns as Fresno and Bakersfield.  It was during that time that I came to know about such artists as Darius Rucker, George Strait, Garth Brooks, Kenny Chesney, Tim McGraw, Faith Hill, Martina McBride, Carrie Underwood, Keith Urban etc., and I did come to love country music.  I suppose it was maybe due to my advancing age, but I could understand the lyrics of country music and sometimes I found the message was hilariously close to what I was feeling at the time.  For instance, unexpectedly after turning 50, this little tune seemed to resonate so well

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ldQrapQ4d0Y


Of course, while the song caught my attention at the time, I tended to shy away from Toby Keith.  He just seemed a bit too rowdy and too "rough" for my tastes, especially after listening to his legendary anthem that he sang right after 9/11. 

But then one day, I learned that my fellow Oklahoman Toby Keith was a good friend of another Oklahoman Wayman Tisdale.  Some of you may remember Wayman Tisdale as being a great basketball player first at the University of Oklahoma and later in the NBA, while others may know of him by his Smooth Jazz career.  By reading and listening to the following one can get a pretty good feel for who Wayman Tisdale was and is

and by listening to and feeling the following one can get a glimpse of his artistry


Obviously, in his life, big Wayman brought great joy to many folks and, apparently, one of those folks was Toby Keith.  I suppose what really got to me a few years ago was to learn that rough and tumble Toby had composed a tribute to his good friend Wayman.  I listened to it ... and I was amazed.  In this tribute there was a melding of black and white, of country and smooth jazz, and it is one of the finest  tribute recordings I have ever heard.  Listen to it and ponder the beauty that can come from brotherhood and love ... and why one just never knows where the next tear drop may fall.



Peace,

Everett "Skip" Jenkins

The Imminent Implosion?

Composed and posted on March 4, 2016

Andy,

I wish I could be as confident of the Trump implosion as you are.  However, for the past eight months I have seen implosion after implosion with regards to The Donald and after each one he seems to only have gotten stronger.  The pundits have been telling us for months that sooner or later the voting public would wake up and vote Trump into obscurity, but the pundits have been wrong time and time again. There is a very troubling undercurrent to Trump's success and at this point I, for one, no longer believe that an "implosion" will simply occur, and if it does occur, I certainly would not want for it to occur sometime next year.  At this point, personal action may be required to assist in Trump's defeat.  Such personal actions may not be successful but, at least, if asked in the future, one will have an explanation for the next generation as to what one was doing when "President Trump" came to be.

Peace,

Everett "Skip" Jenkins

_______________________________________________________________________________________

I appreciate everyone's comments, especially Bob's and Andy's.
I'm now more convinced even than yesterday (before last night's reportedly ridiculous debate, including arguing over the size of Trump's penis and whether Rubio is a little boy) that Trump will implode, whether in a week or in a year - and that the media are just making our chances worse.
Both those things are worth paying attention to!  So, I will, and I invite you to consider them:

I don't think Trump will implode due to the "gaffes" that seem to drive so much media coverage (and perhaps therefore so many pundits' conclusions).  I think he will implode upon some kind of "emperor has no clothes" realization, arising and snowballing at some unpredictable time.  Which is basically what Romney is saying.  And it's the truth.  Ultimately, Trump's calling any such detractor a "loser" will start to appear automatic and false. 
A short letter to the editor in today's NYTimes, apparently by a Trump sympathizer (but who knows), makes the point that the Republican establishment - which certainly holds a clear and united opinion of Trump - nevertheless "just doesn't get" what he's about.  
The writer enumerates the obvious:  that Trump voters have zero respect for the GOP strategy of miring the government to a standstill, in which most of the now-leading GOP candidates would persist.  Trump supporters are sick of that status quo, with America's workers struggling and its conservatives getting nowhere.  They want a master deal-maker to win the White House and make masterful deals on all the areas of civic debate that have paralyzed not only Obama but the Congressional majorities too.
So, sure, they want clever compromises that will get the majority legislative policies into effect.  They're too frustrated and angry to be deterred from that by the rudeness and gaffes might normally change voters' minds, or by the ideological fudging that can actually achieve policy goals.
That rings true with me, as I think of blue-collar America.  And the letter-writer says that "as long as" the GOP persists in its go-nowhere overall strategy and political tactics, Trump will remain the leading contender for the nomination - implying, to me, that he suggests the GOP should relent, getting flexible and practical enough to win the November election and enact its policy goals.
If and when the GOP actually does that anytime soon, I can believe Trump will be toast.  Kasich and possibly Rubio could stomach that approach, and either of them could win the nomination.

But the popular media are impeding that possibility!  They insist on reporting every trend as overwhelming, "projecting" long-term outcomes based on early returns, and emphasizing only the one angle on the facts that sounds most surprising or decisive.  The public is simply deceived by whatever might best win "eyeballs" or sell newspapers.  It's just the market doing its thing to us.

Most Americans probably now believe that Trump has an insurmountable lead in delegates, though he has only 1/5 of the number needed for nomination.  Most Americans probably now think that it's only a matter of time before Kasich drops out, though he's now doing better than Jimmy Carter was doing at this point in 1976.  Most people are probably actually convinced that Cruz demolished Rubio on Super Tuesday, though Cruz outpolled Rubio in only about half of the contests, and where Rubio beat Cruz it was almost always by at least 8 percentage points  while only in his home state did Cruz beat Rubio by that much.

If Ohio and California were in Super Tuesday instead of Virginia and Georgia, the results for Trump, Cruz and Rubio would be very different now ... and those very different results are what we ought to be expecting when the remaining states actually vote, rather than any foregone polling or "momentum" conclusion attributable to the accident or manipulation in the voting calendar.  Trump may have "won" Vermont, but Kasich won just as many delegates as Trump there.  Cruz may have won only three states compared to Trump's six, but his delegate haul in those three alone is more than triple the number Trump won in any state. 
So I urge people to do their own thinking, even though every day we are fed debate shenanigans and mindless statistical extrapolations as the only things worth getting excited about.
My only regret is that the media misleads could cost America the chance to elect a sane president.

- Andy

John Oliver on Donald Trump

Composed and posted on March 4, 2016

Ola, Mark,

This is priceless.  I would suggest that anyone opposing The Donald simply reference John Oliver's show or better yet that they get permission to distribute copies of the show to every household in America. 

Simply brilliant!

Paz, 

Everett "Skip" Jenkins
Class of 1975

________________________________________________________________________________________

Hello to all !
In the face of this true and troubling article... there is another approach that also raises the
issue of "Why Trump"... Intelligent humor.  
Try "John Oliver on Last Week Tonight: Donald Trump"
Mark

________________________________________________________________________________________

Peter,

This is a most insightful article.  Quite thought provoking ... and troubling.

Everett "Skip" Jenkins

__________________________________________________________________________________________


I discovered George Lakoff long after leaving Amherst (he first published in 1963), but ever since reading his Moral Politics I've taken comfort in his explanation of human behavior and conservative behavior in particular. See http://www.huffingtonpost.com/george-lakoff/why-trump_1_b_9372450.html for his latest take on the Trump phenomenon.

Pete

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Why Trump?

Composed and posted on March 3, 2016

Peter,

This is a most insightful article.  Quite thought provoking ... and troubling.

Everett "Skip" Jenkins

__________________________________________________________________________________________


I discovered George Lakoff long after leaving Amherst (he first published in 1963), but ever since reading his Moral Politics I've taken comfort in his explanation of human behavior and conservative behavior in particular. See http://www.huffingtonpost.com/george-lakoff/why-trump_1_b_9372450.html for his latest take on the Trump phenomenon.

Pete