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Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Tuesday, December 20, 2016
Shorts: tiny poems
by Jack Brummet
Resurrection
A roiling thunderstorm clears the air
Like Wyatt Earp's peacekeeper
Resurrection
He was ready to live again
Even if living just meant running
To keep ahead of the ghosts.
Even if living just meant running
To keep ahead of the ghosts.
___________________________
It’s so still and calm
In the mosque,
You could hear a fly expire.
In the mosque,
You could hear a fly expire.
___________________________
Stealth
You think one
thing,
Say another,
And do a third.
___________________________
A roiling thunderstorm clears the air
Like Wyatt Earp's peacekeeper
___________________________
When you strip away the stage flats, makeup, and costumes,
It’s all one story starring our private heroes and dreams.
___________________________
The Marriage
Two tattered mannequins
Prop each other up
In the Salvation Army Store window
Prop each other up
In the Salvation Army Store window
___________________________
Tragedy
Take the worst that could happen
And add two zeros.
And add two zeros.
___________________________
High fidelity clouds gather over
The tattered stage flats of a world on fire.
The tattered stage flats of a world on fire.
___________________________
It's Getting Crowded
We cover the earth with Venn Diagrams
As our steps bisect old steps.
___________________________
Weather Report
Life is a raindrop
Sizzling as it skitters
Across the universal griddle.
Sizzling as it skitters
Across the universal griddle.
___________________________
Waiting
There is no tomorrow
until we get through
the day after yesterday
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Monday, December 19, 2016
Poem: snow day
by Jack Brummet
In silhouette
against bisque skies,
crows bounce
on snow-humped branches,
shaking snow to the ground
and survey the valley
for prey
in dark relief
on the cold white fields.
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Sunday, December 18, 2016
The famous letter the FBI sent to MLK (trying to push him to suicide)
Saturday, December 17, 2016
Friday, December 16, 2016
The Grateful Dead play a free show in my neighborhood in 1967
July 16, 1967 — The Grateful Dead performed at Golden Gardens Park in Seattle. Five other local bands perform at the "Be-In." Admission was free.
The Golden Road
Located in Ballard, Golden Gardens was typically a place where the “straights” hung out, far away from the usual hippie hangouts near the University District and Capitol Hill. The crowd of 2,000 people who gathered at the park for the Be-In was a mix of all folks who just wanted to enjoy some rock music in the hot summer sun.
The bands performed on a flatbed truck with electricity provided by a small portable generator. Brick went on first, followed by Karma, The Daily Flash, The Time Machine, and Pappa Bear's Medicine Show. The Grateful Dead came on last.
The Dead were in Seattle for a show that evening at the Eagles Hall, and since they were veterans of many Be-Ins in San Francisco, the band and their manager, Rock Scully, decided to take part in the gathering at Ballard. The Be-In was arranged by Tim Harvey of Overall Cooperative Structure and Jerry Mathews of United Front Productions.
Unlimited Devotion
In an interview with the Helix, a Seattle-based underground newspaper, Grateful Dead lead guitarist Jerry Garcia (1942-1995) talked about the band’s background, noting that he started playing guitar at 15, that vocalist Ron “Pigpen” McKernan was heavily into country blues, and that bass player Phil Lesh was classically trained on the violin and trumpet. He described the band’s music as mostly blues.
Garcia also talked about the influence of psychedelic drugs on their music, noting that these drugs were just another part of their lifestyle. “The thing that happens when you get high and play,” said Garcia, “is like new ideas present themselves, new possibilities ... . If you’re a little stoned, you’re less into yourself, less into demonstrating your ability, less into your own thing and more into the total thing. Playing itself is a high, playing is in fact the best high I know. There’s no comparable experience in drugs. Nothing like it.”
When asked about the kind of people who came to their shows, the interviewer pointed out that not all people in the Golden Gardens audience were hippies. “No, but they’re all people,” responded Garcia. “Like the more straight people that come to these kind of scenes, the easier it’ll be for them to see that the hippies aren’t going to hurt them. The whole scene is ... good natured.”
Poster for The Grateful Dead at the Seattle Eagles Hall, July 16, 1967 later that night (a paying gig):
Sources: “The Cool Brave Heat for 'Gentle Sunday,'" Seattle Post-Intelligencer, July 17, 1967, p. 3; Interview with Jerry Garcia, Helix, August 16, 1967, p. 11.
This essay was corrected on July 16, 2015.
Fifty years of the Crisis Clinic (video)
A nice video about the Crisis Clinic, where I work two days a week. Check it out, and if you can, donate. . .or volunteer. /jack
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Thursday, December 15, 2016
Irregular roundup of celebrity and other middle fingers
Every few months, we publish the various images of middle fingers our readers have sent to us, along with any choice ones we find along the internet.
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Wednesday, December 14, 2016
Victor Lundy's sketchbooks
By Jack Brummet
Victor Lundy, born in NYC in 1923, was an art and architecture student who later enlisted during World War II. Throughout training and when he was deployed in Europe, he kept a set of sketchbooks of the people and scenes around him. After the war, he became a famous/successful architect. You can find selections from the sketchbooks here, on Retronaut.
Victor Lundy, born in NYC in 1923, was an art and architecture student who later enlisted during World War II. Throughout training and when he was deployed in Europe, he kept a set of sketchbooks of the people and scenes around him. After the war, he became a famous/successful architect. You can find selections from the sketchbooks here, on Retronaut.
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Tuesday, December 13, 2016
Richard Fong's amazing painting of Ronald Reagan (ca. 1984)
by Jack Brummet
In 1984, Richard Fong, a friend, co-worker, and San Francisco artist, gave me this oil painting. We'd spent the election making twisted collages of Ronald Reagan and the Administration (to the chagrin of the owner of the commercial real estate appraiser's office where we worked).
It has hung on the wall everywhere I've lived since. What I love most about this painting is that it captures the soul of Ronald Reagan, but also adds in—somehow!—a touch of Richard Nixon. Other people, unprompted, have noticed this too. It's been an inspiration for some 30 years now, and I've always been grateful for the gift. Every time I look at it I remember Richard.
In 1984, Richard Fong, a friend, co-worker, and San Francisco artist, gave me this oil painting. We'd spent the election making twisted collages of Ronald Reagan and the Administration (to the chagrin of the owner of the commercial real estate appraiser's office where we worked).
It has hung on the wall everywhere I've lived since. What I love most about this painting is that it captures the soul of Ronald Reagan, but also adds in—somehow!—a touch of Richard Nixon. Other people, unprompted, have noticed this too. It's been an inspiration for some 30 years now, and I've always been grateful for the gift. Every time I look at it I remember Richard.
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President Elect Trump: Why I don't need briefings
by Jack Brummet
DJT on Fox today, explaining why he doesn't need daily intel briefings:
"I don’t have to be told ― you know, I’m, like, a smart person. I don’t have to be told the same thing in the same words every single day.”
“I don’t need to be told ... the same thing every day, every morning ― same words. ‘Sir, nothing has changed. Let’s go over it again.’
DJT on Fox today, explaining why he doesn't need daily intel briefings:
"I don’t have to be told ― you know, I’m, like, a smart person. I don’t have to be told the same thing in the same words every single day.”
“I don’t need to be told ... the same thing every day, every morning ― same words. ‘Sir, nothing has changed. Let’s go over it again.’
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Monday, December 12, 2016
Sunday, December 11, 2016
Saturday, December 10, 2016
Friday, December 09, 2016
Thursday, December 08, 2016
Wednesday, December 07, 2016
Pearl Harbor Day, 75 years later
by Jack Brummet
Remembering Pearl Harbor. My Uncle Bill enlisted in the Navy the next day (I think!). Both of my parents enlisted―father in the navy too (he had already served in the army) and my mother Betty in the Marine Corps.
My mother remembers Japanese kids being led out of Ballard High later, on their way to the internment camps. Some of the students lined up and booed.
Remembering Pearl Harbor. My Uncle Bill enlisted in the Navy the next day (I think!). Both of my parents enlisted―father in the navy too (he had already served in the army) and my mother Betty in the Marine Corps.
My mother remembers Japanese kids being led out of Ballard High later, on their way to the internment camps. Some of the students lined up and booed.
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Tuesday, December 06, 2016
Kerry County grants permission to drive drunk
"The Kerry, Ireland, county council voted in January [2013] to let some people drive drunk. The councillors reasoned that in the county’s isolated regions, some seniors live alone and need the camaraderie of the pub but fear a DUI arrest on the way home. The councillors thus empowered police to issue DUI permits to those drivers. Besides, they reasoned, the area is so sparsely-populated that some drivers never encounter anyone else on the road at night. (Coincidentally--or not--"several” of the five councillors voting "yea" own pubs.)" ― Weirduniverse.net and BBC News, 1-22-2013]
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Monday, December 05, 2016
Abandoned earth river view
From Instagram abandonedearth: Crystal Mill, Colorado.
A photo posted by Beautiful Abandoned Earth (@abandonedearth) on
Hunting trip nearly ends in a tie
By Lizzy Acker | The Oregonian/OregonLive
Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on November 07, 2016 at 11:32 AM, updated November 07, 2016 at 10:37 PM
Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on November 07, 2016 at 11:32 AM, updated November 07, 2016 at 10:37 PM
A Bend man was impaled in the back by the antlers of an elk he had just shot on Saturday, according to Crook County Sheriff's Office.
Gary Heeter, 69, was hunting in "a very remote location" in the Maury Mountains where he killed an elk. Around noon. as he was dragging the carcass of the animal behind his four-wheeler up a steep hill, the vehicle flipped and he flew back and landed on his dead prey.
Members of the hunting party applied first aid to Heeter to stanch the flow of blood.
"When the deputy arrived at the crash scene," said the sheriff's office, "he found Heeter was conscious and communicative, but appeared to be going into shock."
Heeter was flown to St. Charles Hospital in Bend by a Life Flight helicopter, but not before it had difficulty finding a suitable landing location "due to the rough terrain, which consisted of intermittent forest cover and rocky clearings."
According to KATU, the Crook County Sheriff's Office reports that Heeter is in stable condition.
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Personal jet packs go on sale mid-2017
"Australian aviator David Mayman has promised investors that his personal jet packs will hit the market by mid-2017, though early adopters will pay about $250,000 for one, to fly a person at up to 60 mph for 10 minutes. The JB-10 (developed by Mayman and designer Nelson Tyler) has made about 400 test runs in Monaco and over downtown London and New York City, but the partners realize that ultimate success will require that the fuel tanks be downsized so that the craft can be powered electrically--and thus seek crowdfunding both for that model and a larger one to accommodate the Pentagon's (Special Operations Command) tactical needs."
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3926700/Move-James-Bond-World-s-commercially-available-jetpack-sale-qualified-buyers.html#ixzz4RzOVdDu8
- The JB-10 JetPack uses two minature jet engines fixed to a harness.
- The engines run on aviation fuel and can together lift 350lbs at a time.
- It can be controlled using two joysticks which control the lift and direction of the jetpack.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3926700/Move-James-Bond-World-s-commercially-available-jetpack-sale-qualified-buyers.html#ixzz4RzOVdDu8
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