Saturday, April 16, 2005
POTUS 30: President Calvin Coolidge "Keep Cool With Coolidge"
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President Coolidge was a quiet, sober and somber man, whose pained expression concealed a dry wit. In the middle of the night in 1923, he was informed of the death of Warren Harding. Coolidge's father, a justice of the peace, gave Coolidge the Oath Of Office, and he immediately went back to bed! He finished Harding's term, and ran for one on his own. Although he was eligible to run for an additional term (like LBJ), he chose not to.
Although he was a well-loved President, after leaving office his policies were increasingly blamed for the events that led to the Great Depression.
On being told of Calvin Coolidge's death, Dorothy Parker famously remarked of the taciturn President, "How could they tell?"
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Friday, April 15, 2005
POTUS 1: The First President Of The United States, Pres. George Washington a/k/a The General a/k/a The Father Of Our Country
Click to enlarge
More nonsense has probably been written about Washington than any other President. Except Jack Kennedy, about whom even more gibberish has been written because his murder literally sparked an industry of conspiracy theorists.
Did young George chop down the cherry tree? Was he lying when he said "Father, I cannot tell a lie," which may be the biggest whopper of all time? "Father, I cannot tell a lie. I cut the tree," George says when asked by his father. This story elevated him into the pantheon and onto Rushmore. It is also bunk, bogus, hokum, flim-flam::::::::::100% ca-ca. Parson Mason Locke Weems concocted the story in a biography of Washington. In The Moral Washington: Construction of a Legend Weems wanted to humanize Washington after a less than flattering earlier biography of him as 'cold and colorless.' Weems book was very popular with the public and they equated Washington with honesty.
Did he wear wooden teeth? No. He had hippomus ivory teeth--from rarely visited Africa. How they became his teeth is a mystery.
His tight-lipped grimace is often attributed to the wooden teeth. We do know that his false teeth has springs that made them adhere in place, but that is not the reason for the tight-lipped grin. The raconteur, humorist, and radio legend Jean Shepherd talked about Washington on his Washington birthday show on February 22, 1973. Shep tried to bust a few of the myths around The General. In particular, some of the notions that have arisen from Gilbert Stuart's portraits.
We remember President Washington as tight lipped and aloof because as Gilbert Stuart wrote "When I painted him, he had just had a set of false teeth inserted, which accounts for the constrained expression so noticeable about the mouth and lower part of the face." However, we now know that Stuart disliked George Washington and many people speculate this led to the tight lipped portrait, as well as the air of aloofness we sense in Washington. Stuart also wrote that when he would sit for him: "an apathy seemed to seize him, and a vacuity spread over his countenance, most appalling to paint."
Thanks to the portraits, we also think of him as a dandified man, wearing flouncy shirts, an ornate doublet and knickers. We think of his hair as being bright white. As was the fashion at the time, that was a powdered wig!
We tend to also think of him as a genteel and gentle man of restraint (again, partly due to the portraits). However, he was a man of large appetites who enjoyed copious flagons of Madeira wine (and would have no doubt enoyed bourbon, had it been invented yet). He was not afraid to take a another officer out for a round of fisticuffs, and usually won. Martha Washington indicated in more than one letter to friends that "George is at it again," which some have speculated refers to extramarital affairs.
George was a big man. In that time, the average height of a Continental Army soldier was five foot six inches. George Washington stood six foot, two inches. He was literally a giant among men.
Washington was also an incredible horseman, by all accounts, both in peace- and in war-time. He was a strong man, and tough as nails, as he showed in the war, living under-equipped in the appalling climate of Valley Forge and the other battles of the revolution.
Washington State is the only state named for a President. When I grew up in the 50's and 60's, Washington's birthday was still a state holiday (before that abomination known as President's Day). On February 22, in celebration of the event, cherry pies were on sale in the stores and at bake sales by the Rotary, the Civitan Club, Kiwanis, and others.
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Thursday, April 14, 2005
Poem: When Aliens Land, Or, The Return Of The King
click to enlarge
When aliens land
Do they come as Farmers,
To harvest seeds they planted long ago?
Is it "hi, Mom," or "hello cousin,"
Or will we be enslaved as drones?
Will they stop in for phosphorous or zinc or bauxite?
Or will they just toss earth in the back
Of an enormous galactic flatbed truckfarm pick-up
And head back to Zeta Reticulon?
Will they make this spinning ball
A rendering plant, or will they
Come to absorb our wisdom, art and humanity?
We never picture
aliens, greys, or martians
Coming in peace
Because we never came in peace.
---o0o---
Wednesday, April 13, 2005
How Do People End Up At Blogspot?, Continued
I wrote yesterday about how people end up at All This Is That. It's interesting...I went back over the referrals from search engines over the last 72 hours-->
Foot Washing Baptists (leads to my story about growing up Baptist)
video - cougar chasing pronghorn antelope (I published a land speed of animals list)
how many times david caruso appeared naked in NYPD (I mentioned this briefly in one post--it's obviously a popular search topic)
Urban Legend (the phrase occurs many times, and in my profile)
monkey and the engineer (I printed the lyrics)
creating chimeras (mentioned in one post)
im my own grandpa lyrics (printed the lyrics)
who runs faster - gazelle or pronghorn antelope (the land speed list again)
"heroes and villains" (the paintings again)
Optical illusion abraham lincoln (I have several Lincoln pieces, and I printed an optical illusion once)
"bella abzug" + "phyllis schlafly" (each appeared in heroes and villains paintings)
david caruso" +"three times" +buttocks (people love his butt I guess!)
The First "accidental president" was (mentioned in two or three posts)
song lyrics + I'm my own grandpa (I printed the lyrics here)
"29th presidency" (refers to Pres. Harding, of whom I did a POTUS painting)
"lockable pizza box" (comes from a list of new patents I published)
"lockable pizza box" (see above comment)
"condoleezza rice nude" (This was the title of a post I did about weird searches)
retriever "heroic dog stories" (referred to the story of dogs committing suicide)
im my own grandpa lyrics (see earlier)
Chinese astrophysicist Dr. Kang Mao-pang photos (Mentioned in The Skeleton On The Moon story)
"bug in the rug" +garciaroc jerrycan 1945 (interesting - this led to a piece about the Dead, where I wrote "there will always be a void that only Jerry can fill...")
disagreement between Bob Weir Phil Lesh on tour 2005 (Both Lesh and Weir were in the Heroes and Villains paintings)
Was Lauren Bacall Hot? (refers to the picture I printed of Lauren "Betty" Bacall on the piano while Harry was playing. And the answer to that question is "yes!").
Sex orgy+ oral sex (This is from a piece I wrote about President Bush where I used both those phrases in an indirect context--not referring to POTUS specifically).
---o0o---
Foot Washing Baptists (leads to my story about growing up Baptist)
video - cougar chasing pronghorn antelope (I published a land speed of animals list)
how many times david caruso appeared naked in NYPD (I mentioned this briefly in one post--it's obviously a popular search topic)
Urban Legend (the phrase occurs many times, and in my profile)
monkey and the engineer (I printed the lyrics)
creating chimeras (mentioned in one post)
im my own grandpa lyrics (printed the lyrics)
who runs faster - gazelle or pronghorn antelope (the land speed list again)
"heroes and villains" (the paintings again)
Optical illusion abraham lincoln (I have several Lincoln pieces, and I printed an optical illusion once)
"bella abzug" + "phyllis schlafly" (each appeared in heroes and villains paintings)
david caruso" +"three times" +buttocks (people love his butt I guess!)
The First "accidental president" was (mentioned in two or three posts)
song lyrics + I'm my own grandpa (I printed the lyrics here)
"29th presidency" (refers to Pres. Harding, of whom I did a POTUS painting)
"lockable pizza box" (comes from a list of new patents I published)
"lockable pizza box" (see above comment)
"condoleezza rice nude" (This was the title of a post I did about weird searches)
retriever "heroic dog stories" (referred to the story of dogs committing suicide)
im my own grandpa lyrics (see earlier)
Chinese astrophysicist Dr. Kang Mao-pang photos (Mentioned in The Skeleton On The Moon story)
"bug in the rug" +garciaroc jerrycan 1945 (interesting - this led to a piece about the Dead, where I wrote "there will always be a void that only Jerry can fill...")
disagreement between Bob Weir Phil Lesh on tour 2005 (Both Lesh and Weir were in the Heroes and Villains paintings)
Was Lauren Bacall Hot? (refers to the picture I printed of Lauren "Betty" Bacall on the piano while Harry was playing. And the answer to that question is "yes!").
Sex orgy+ oral sex (This is from a piece I wrote about President Bush where I used both those phrases in an indirect context--not referring to POTUS specifically).
---o0o---
Tuesday, April 12, 2005
How Do People End Up At Blogspot?
The counter that I have on this web site also tracks how people got here. If you did a search on Yahoo or Google or any search engine, it grabs the text of the search. People come here for a lot of reasons--usually some specific topical reference. Today I noticed several people come from what turned out to be a porn site. It seems the site had All This Is That as a favorite link because of a couple of stories: mainly Frank Zappa's story of how he never ate s**t on stage, and the piece where I talked about the low esteem the Catholic Church was held in in Baptist churches.
Other sites have linked to the story about fishing with my old man, and some of the My Worst Jobs stories. One site on the presidency, has links to several of the digital paintings and thumbnail bios of the Presidents.
A lot of people come here from searches on poetry, the phrase Heroes And Villains (which was the title of 50 posts over time); searches on The President, and on POTUS; and various political topics. References to the Grateful Dead draw a lot of customers. Clearly it's titles of posts and names that draw people here.
Anyhow it's fascinating some of the twisted searches that draw people here too--sex with dogs has popped up a couple of times, although I have never addressed that subject (or engaged in the act)...but it must be in some quote or something.
For months, you couldn't find topics I'd addressed directly, but now that I am in the crawlers line of sight, even slight phrases buried in the middle of a posting will come up in a search. And in searches where you don't understand exactly why it was "googled." Yahoo and Google are by the far the most common search referrals, with Yahoo referring slightly more people.
The majority of referrals, however, come from Blogspot itself. People click the next blog button and are taken on a blind ride. People apparently do that a lot.
The third most common referral here seems to be either people who know me, or who have read the blog before and bookmarked it.
Other sites have linked to the story about fishing with my old man, and some of the My Worst Jobs stories. One site on the presidency, has links to several of the digital paintings and thumbnail bios of the Presidents.
A lot of people come here from searches on poetry, the phrase Heroes And Villains (which was the title of 50 posts over time); searches on The President, and on POTUS; and various political topics. References to the Grateful Dead draw a lot of customers. Clearly it's titles of posts and names that draw people here.
Anyhow it's fascinating some of the twisted searches that draw people here too--sex with dogs has popped up a couple of times, although I have never addressed that subject (or engaged in the act)...but it must be in some quote or something.
For months, you couldn't find topics I'd addressed directly, but now that I am in the crawlers line of sight, even slight phrases buried in the middle of a posting will come up in a search. And in searches where you don't understand exactly why it was "googled." Yahoo and Google are by the far the most common search referrals, with Yahoo referring slightly more people.
The majority of referrals, however, come from Blogspot itself. People click the next blog button and are taken on a blind ride. People apparently do that a lot.
The third most common referral here seems to be either people who know me, or who have read the blog before and bookmarked it.
POTUS 43: Pres. George W. Bush - One Of The Nearly 5% Of Presidents Who Are Sons Of Presidents
Monday, April 11, 2005
John Edwards Speaks Up
Ex-Senator and VPOTUS candidate John Edwards speaks out about Terry Schiavo, Hillary Clinton, and Condy Rice. Click on the title for a link to the article.
“I think talking about a front-runner four years before an election is ridiculous."
“We saw the memo that went out to Republican leaders about how they could take political advantage of Terri Schiavo. That’s disgusting. They will pay a price for this in the 2006 and 2008 elections.”
POTUS 36: Pres. Lyndon Baines Johnson - Majority Leader, Accidental President, Hawk
Click to enlarge
I've written a couple of times about Lyndon Johnson, the hero, and Lyndon Johnson, the paranoid and bellicose monster. When I did my series on Heroes And Villains, I considered using a picture of him as both the hero and the villain.
Some of my favorite political books have been Lyndon Johnson biographies and studies. Recently, the movie Fog of War was an fascinating rehash of LBJ, the unwitting inheritor of an unwinnable (as he seemed to know from the get-go) war.
If you get a chance, the LBJ museum in Austin, TX, is worth an afternoon visit.
---o0o---
Sunday, April 10, 2005
POTUS 22 And 24: President Grover Cleveland - The Man Who Was President Twice
Click to enlarge
The New York Times obituary of him on 6-25-1908 is full of praise from all quarters and in 1908, many people placed Cleveland at the very top of Presidents, right up there with the men on Rushmore (which, of course, didn't exist yet).
From his stint as mayor of Buffalo, to his time as Governor of New York, he was considered a hard working and honest man known for his sense of duty. He took on Tammany Hall when it was risky to do so, and despite the machine having backed him for Governor. He was one of the good guys.
President Cleveland had a sex-scandal or two to live down: he was accused of fathering a son out of wedlock--a charge that he admitted might be true (!), because of his affair with Maria Halpin in 1874. By 'fessing up, Cleveland pulled off what we might think of as a "Bill Clinton" and won the election by a slim margin.
After two years as a bachelor President, Cleveland announced his marriage to his twenty-one-year-old ward, Frances Folsom, the daughter of his former law partner. The press had a field day satirizing the relationship between the old bachelor and the recent college graduate, who quickly became the most popular first lady since Dolley Madison.
Cleveland would lose in his re-election bid, and is the first and last president to bounce back from a loss to retake the White House.
Historians consider him a President who strengthened the executive branch, but made no dramatic accomplishments, and had no real vision for the future. He is most remebered as being a bridge to the modern strong presidency as it would be practiced by Teddy Roosevelt and those to follow.
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Chicken Cacciotare
Jack’s Chicken Cacciatore With Bay Leaves (And No Tomatoes)
1 chicken, or parts if you don't like to dismember chickens
3 Tbs. E.V. Olive Oil
4 cloves garlic
2 teaspoons dried rosemary, or, preferably, 2 Tbs fresh
5 Bay leaves
3 Tbs. Italian Parsley
2 Celery Stalks (with some leaves)
1 Cup dry white wine
1/3 cup Apple Cider or Red Wine Vinegar
¼ cup Chicken stock
salt and fresh ground black pepper
Cut the chicken into eight or ten pieces. I like to skin it. Season it with salt and fresh ground pepper.
Make a battuto of the parsley, rosemary, celery and garlic (that is, chop it fine).
Add the olive oil to a pot. When it is hazy, add the chicken and bay leaves. Brown the chicken, turning once in a while, for ten minutes over medium high heat. Add the battuto, and cook for a couple of minutes, stirring so the veggies don’t stick.
Deglaze the pan with the wine, stirring up the brown bits, and cook off the alcohol. Add chicken stock, and reduce it a couple of minutes. Add the vinegar. Cover the pot, and simmer the chicken over a medium low flame until tender…about 15 minutes. Check the seasoning and add a bit of salt and pepper. We usually serve this with Italian or French bread and put out small bowls of the de-fatted sauce for bread dipping.
---o0o---
1 chicken, or parts if you don't like to dismember chickens
3 Tbs. E.V. Olive Oil
4 cloves garlic
2 teaspoons dried rosemary, or, preferably, 2 Tbs fresh
5 Bay leaves
3 Tbs. Italian Parsley
2 Celery Stalks (with some leaves)
1 Cup dry white wine
1/3 cup Apple Cider or Red Wine Vinegar
¼ cup Chicken stock
salt and fresh ground black pepper
Cut the chicken into eight or ten pieces. I like to skin it. Season it with salt and fresh ground pepper.
Make a battuto of the parsley, rosemary, celery and garlic (that is, chop it fine).
Add the olive oil to a pot. When it is hazy, add the chicken and bay leaves. Brown the chicken, turning once in a while, for ten minutes over medium high heat. Add the battuto, and cook for a couple of minutes, stirring so the veggies don’t stick.
Deglaze the pan with the wine, stirring up the brown bits, and cook off the alcohol. Add chicken stock, and reduce it a couple of minutes. Add the vinegar. Cover the pot, and simmer the chicken over a medium low flame until tender…about 15 minutes. Check the seasoning and add a bit of salt and pepper. We usually serve this with Italian or French bread and put out small bowls of the de-fatted sauce for bread dipping.
---o0o---
Evil Rubbish
From Engrish.com, another great sign. This web site specializes in wacky English and words and phrases that are extremely lost in translation. This is a fascinating and deep collection.
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