Entries Tagged as 'art & entertainment'

music

A Perlman before swine?

Greetings. This is my first post on When Falls the Coliseum and I’m not quite sure what I will be writing about. Certainly, my 26 years in the symphony orchestra business will be a recurring theme, particularly when I come across articles or news on that subject. I hope also to weigh in on numerous other, mostly cultural, topics. At 55, I cast a cold, if not curmudgeonly eye on the current state of culture. Everything seems to be dying. Some of my favorite things, like Top 40 radio, died long ago. The death of the LP and now the CD (a poor substitute), and the virtual demise of the music industry, is a constant thorn. And, in the last year, we saw the deforestation of most culture reporting in print, including huge losses for reviewers of all kinds. And don’t get me started on computer graphics in the movies. I can’t blame the end of melody on the universal digitalization of creativity alone, but the fact remains that melody just doesn’t seem to interest anyone anymore. The world, at least the younger world, seems content to seek philosophy from 20-year old guitarists. Well, you grok my drift, as my wife is used to my saying.

 Let’s begin. [Read more →]

his & herstelevision

Sanctioned stalking

After watching the Titans throw and fumble away their playoff game versus Baltimore on Saturday, I was all footballed out. So for the first time in my life, I watched an entire episode of The Bachelor from start to finish. It just happened to be the season premiere, and from a male perspective, how could I be unhappy? One guy, 25 women to look at from the start, including one former Dallas Cowboys cheerleader… gotta like those numbers!

The object of the ladies’ affection is a fella named Jason, who apparently appeared on the previous season of The Bachelorette and came up short in his quest for love. Throughout the night, whether they were talking to Jason or each other, almost every female talked about how they had been “so attracted to Jason” while watching him on television and many boasted of feeling like they had developed connections with him from afar. 
  
Um… isn’t that a little stalkerish? The fact that it’s network approved shouldn’t make it any less weird. If I were to show up in front of some arbitrary actress I like, flaunting our supposed similarities, and trying to give her a rose, I’d probably wind up gang tackled by large security guards.
 
Reality television doesn’t get any more unreal.

 

art & entertainmenttrusted media & news

Anderson Cooper and Kathy Griffin ring in 2009 for CNN

At 9:30pm on New Year’s Eve my friend’s two-year-old son threw up. They left by 10pm. My kids were asleep by 10:45pm. My husband and I took our respective drinks to the couch. We flipped through the channels and were bored by everything on. We didn’t want to put on a movie. We wanted to see and feel the spirit of the night (even though we weren’t actively participating in anything very exciting ourselves). For us that meant watching the ball drop in Times Square. I’ve been to Times Square four times to ring-in the New Year but this year I was perfectly content to be with my family; maybe even, as others have said, I couldn’t think of a single happier way to ring in the new year.

So, we chose to watch the pre and post ball-dropping commentary on television. However, I did want to be, at least slightly, entertained — and Dick Clark’s New Year’s Eve doesn’t do it for me anymore. Really, I just can’t stand Ryan Seacrest. So we turned to CNN. Really, we did!

Anderson Cooper had Kathy Griffin co-host the evening with him. What a ridiculously unlikely combination. We flipped to CNN thinking we were going to switch out just as quickly as we’d found them. We didn’t. We stayed. And we liked it. They had a lot of time to fill and did a really good job making people feel like they were part of the evening. I’ve never been a fan of Kathy’s — her humor just never did anything for me. However, for this one evening, she was the perfect ying to Anderson’s yang.

Did anyone else watch? Did I miss fabulous programming somewhere? Let me know so I can make note for next year!

music

Drone Machines

A former bandmate of mine went to engineering school, then scuttled the guitars to write heavy metal with…actual heavy metal. Ground Control Magazine has a great video interview up with him now showcasing the sounds of doom and apocalypse he is able to wrestle out of his huge drone machines. It’s that rare circumstance of something totally unique being created, a pairing of uber-smarts and primitive roar.  

movies

Aaron Sorkin can’t handle the truth

Charlie Wilson’s War could have been a very powerful movie but ended up being merely amusing. All this talent, all this crackling dialogue and brilliant scene direction stopped short, as if the money abruptly ran out, just like it did for the covert ops in Afghanistan 20 years ago. Yet again, Aaron Sorkin takes a whack at a complex issue and runs away like a manipulative little girl as soon as it’s time for counterarguments. [Read more →]

art & entertainmentrecipes & food

The sushi apocalpyse creeps ever closer

Speaking of sushi and regrets, as I was on this site just yesterday, Jeremy Piven probably regrets ingesting those massive amounts of tuna sushi, since according to widely circulated news reports he’s now suffering from acute mercury toxicity, leading to neuromuscular problems, extreme fatigue, and dizziness, and making him more vulnerable to kidney failure and heart disease.  

There is considerable skepticism, particularly among those closest to him, that Piven actually has mercury poisoning.  As to where this skepticism comes from, let’s just say that, reading between the lines of some of the news reports, it would appear that the Ari Gold character that Piven plays on Entourage may not be too much of a dramatic stretch for him. 

However, Piven’s pecadilloes don’t change the fact that mercury can be present in very high levels in tuna sushi, something that I’ll bet most sushi eaters aren’t even aware of.   Add that to the disturbing ubiquity of sushi in restaurants, grocery stores and other locations that are far from the ocean and in other respects utterly unqualified to be serving the stuff, and the impending sushi apocalypse I spoke of a while back may be creeping ever closer. 

My advice:  Get the salmon sushi instead of the tuna.  (And, while you’re at it, avoid any and all sushi from overfished species.)  Make sure your sushi chef doesn’t have any prison tattoos on his forearms.  Eschew delivery sushi, especially in the middle of the summer.  And if the restaurant you’re eating at is more than 200 miles from the nearest ocean or international airport, consider getting the tempura soba instead. 

 

art & entertainmenthis & hers

Yes, Virginia, there is a Mario Van Peebles

The comedian Todd Barry has a great bit on hanging out with the dread “we agree on everything” couple who “pretend to share the most obscure opinions in the world” as an over the top, contrived way of trumpeting just how miraculously intertwined their consciousnesses have become thanks to the Big L-O-V-E. Median interests do merge, of course, especially in marriage — that is if you want to create a home rather than two herds of competing hobby horses under a single shared roof. At the same time, individualism is the birthright of the bourgeois (see the fantastic Age of Abundance) and to completely undermine that, under whatever auspices, does a great disservice to the generations of those for whom individual pursuits, interests and rights were — and in many parts of the world still are — subverted to the all-consuming struggle to simply survive. Not to mention one of the great things about a long-term relationship is how differences in taste can broaden horizons, drag you out of self-wrought ruts, and, with surprising frequency, bring the funny.      

Last year, for example, in a piece I wrote for the now-defunct magazine Radar on extreme metal culture, I recounted a conversation in which I tried to differentiate for my wife the nuances between the death metal and grindcore bands I was about to go see:

My long-suffering wife, a financial attorney whose taste in music runs more toward the Decemberists and Built to Spill than Nasum and Tragedy, finds it difficult to take an interest in some of my interests, try as she might. 

“You must be excited to see Pig Destroyer,” she said as I headed off to last year’s Summer Slaughter package tour.

“No, it’s Cattle Decapitation,” I answered, perhaps a bit snippily. Does she ever listen to me? “Different band.”

“Wasn’t Pig Destroyer playing, too, though?”

“Actually, Cattle Decapitation is playing with … well, just plain Decapitation and Cephalic Carnage.”

“What’s ‘cephalic’ mean?”

“Um, head, I think.”

“Head carnage? Okay, have a … uh, good time?”

Likewise, this morning I somehow came to make a crack about Mario Van Peebles — that kinder, gentler cultural descendent of Richard Roundtree whose entire career has fairly screamed If only I came of age in 1971! Sadly for Mr. Van Peebles, my wife insisted I had invented the name and, so, a few hours later, disregarding the fact that she has, you know, a real job, I badgered her with an email linking to the African American star’s IMDB page. Subject line: Here’s the part where you apologize…

Her response?

I think I can be forgiven for not knowing the name of the star of the movie  How to Get the Man’s Foot Outta Your Ass, aka Baadasssss!, aka Badass, aka Gettin’ the Man’s Foot Outta Your Baadasssss! 

Umm…touche! I love my wife. Even more than Mario Van Peebles. What choice do I have?

family & parentingtelevision

Turning it off

My hands were shaking. My breath was coming in short gasps. I picked up the phone. Put it down. I wondered if I was being too hasty, if I would feel differently in the morning. Would I come to regret this on a lonely night when I was home with nothing to do? But I had to. It was the right thing to do. I picked up the phone, dialed the number and… canceled my cable service.

Call it a New Year’s Resolution, one month ahead of schedule: Turn off the TV. I’ve been spending way too much time on the couch watching TV when I could be doing a million other things. Like laundry or cooking, taking the dog for a walk, taking myself for a walk, teaching Callie how to short-sheet a bed. Anything. Almost any activity in the world would be more useful than sitting around watching TV. [Read more →]

movies

Quantum of Fun

So, this weekend, we finally saw the curiously anhedonic Quantum of Solace. It started off well enough, with a solid car chase and a lot of expensive damage, but when it skipped the traditional James Bond theme opening and went straight to a really, really bad song, I knew it was going to be a bumpy ride.

[Read more →]

art & entertainmentends & odd

Wake Up from the Weekend Hangover!

I am so exhausted from this weekend. Literally hung over — without the benefit the alcohol would have provided the night before. Thanksgiving was a calm day with 13 adults (and seven children, between the ages of two and ten) over for dinner. Twenty people is actually a relatively small gathering for us; plus, the kids don’t really count. By 10pm everything was cleaned up, the extra tables and chairs were back in the basement, and the kids (my two, plus a sleepover buddy) were out cold. I can’t even claim cooking exhaustion since everyone brought a dish, allowing my husband and I to worry primarily about the set-up, the 20 lb. turkey, and the stuffing.

The rest of the long weekend was not overly involved but, for some reason, I still felt spent. So now, Sunday night, I am sitting at my computer thinking of all of the things I should be doing but can’t bring myself to do. The emails I have flagged. The facebook invites I have pending. The holiday shopping I need to do online. The new business I have to find. The list goes on! But sometimes you just have to say screw it and ignore all of those nagging things. So, instead of feeling guilty about avoiding my to-do list I gave myself permission to aimlessly surf. And it was worth it.

Check out this 3-minute trailer for The PenIsMightier that I found on Buzz Feed. It woke me up from my sleepy state and made me laugh. In case you, too, are feeling the holiday hang over, this video on the “epic struggle of straight-edge rulers and the mighty pen that brought freedom to pencils” will give you a jolt.

art & entertainmentdiatribes

Fill it to the brim

I’m not the first one to say it, but I’m probably the first to say it here:

Hey, actors: put some water or something in those empty take-out coffee cups you’re holding, and stop winging them around like you really wouldn’t. Another tip: you can’t gulp it down that hot.

For the umpteenth time, my wife and I have been distracted by your flailing. Please, someone put a stop to this. New rule: You must have liquid in your acting-cup.

 

television

Barbara and Rosie — Enough Already!

Oh man — the drama. Rosie needs to tell the world that the women on The View don’t get along. And as girls must do… Barbara’s striking back by using her television show to hurl lessons at Rosie. Ladies — can’t you just write each other a letter? We don’t need to be a part of this little cat fight you’ve got going on. I can’t even bring myself to watch The View on a day when I am home sick and my computer is freezing up on me.

I wish you were one of the many celebrities who threatened to move to another country if Obama lost. Oh. Wait. Nevermind.

art & entertainmentcreative writing

Tennessee’s Tragic Muse

Here in Chicago, the Steppenwolf Theatre Company is currently mounting a well-reviewed “Young Adult’s Production” of The Glass Menagerie, which raises the question, “what production of The Glass Menagerie is not for young adults?” 

I don’t mean this at all facetiously, because there is no more poetic and poignant play in the American canon, and its status as an American literary classic is very much merited.  

But when I saw a production some years ago at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival, it struck me that, as gloomy as the play’s portrait of the repressed and crippled Laura Wingfield might be, it represents a kind of wish-fulfillment on the part of Tennessee Williams, a determinedly brave and poetically false obscuring and softening of a much darker reality that might have been difficult for 13-year-olds to absorb or accept.  [Read more →]

art & entertainment

The Wages Of Sin…

…may be death and everlasting torment, but mangling a song by one of Satan’s best known minions at karaoke carries its own price, as two Wiscon-Sin men learned the hard way recently. Two additional, tangentially related thoughts: First, I love that one of these guys was named Cyrus. It reminds me of the lyrics to a classic Mountain Goats song about the eventual triumph of heavy metal-infused darkness (which I also reference in this column on the Middle East metal uprising). Second, it gives me the opportunity to say that, although I own selections from both, I have always found Dio’s Black Sabbath years much more satisfying than his solo work. Hipsters seem to love the latter for the opportunity it gives them to make exaggerated cock-rock faces, thereby scrubbing whatever traces of subtlety have somehow remained embedded in their studiously manufactured air of ironic detachment. The former, meanwhile, is largely and paradoxically overlooked precisely because an album such as Heaven and Hell does not to lend itself to such treatment. At least not entirely.

I realize I’m in the minority on this and many other issues of varying importance. Then again, as Dio himself once noted, “If you listen to fools…The mob rules!”

art & entertainmentpolitics & government

Dear Ashton, you’re just punking us, right? Sarah Palin? World’s best prank?

Seriously?  This is the best the Republicans could do? I keep thinking we’re being punk’d. I envision Ashton Kutcher, breaking through a polar ice cap with a frozen camera crew and announcing that he’s pulled off the ultimate prank. I know we’re at the end of the game here. I know it’s all been said. Regardless, I just can’t get over the fact that this woman was ever invited to the party in the first place. Blows my mind.

art & entertainment

Please don’t go!

If one more celebrity says they are going to leave the country if “so and so” wins the election, I’m going to physically remove them myself. How ego maniacal do you have to be to think that anyone would care if you stayed or left?  Don’t get me wrong, I’m a Project Runway fan, but if Heidi Klum were to up and leave, I’m pretty confident that I would survive just fine, as would the rest of the country.  I understand the sentiment behind their statement and while I agree with Heidi and Seal’s politics, it’s somewhat obnoxious to proclaim how easy it would be for them to simply relocate to another country, considering the economic state of our country.  I’m sure it’s incredibly difficult to summon your private plane and be whisked away to one of your many homes overseas.

Oh and Stephen Baldwin, can you leave no matter who wins? Please? Unless there’s a Threesome sequel in the hopper, I really don’t see any reason for you to stick around.

art & entertainment

Vaginal Cleansing

Why, you might ask, is my blog headlined “Vaginal Cleansing?” Well, the short answer is I saw just about the funniest video on this topic.

The only time I’ve seen the show Chelsea Lately (hosted by Chelsea Handler) is when it’s been made fun of by Joel McHale on Talk Soup. That is until I came across this Amy Sedaris interview on You Tube. Before you click on the link and press the play button, make sure the young kids are out of the room — and if you want to get right to the part that had me in stitches, start watching at about a minute fifty in. In short, designer Todd Oldham created a vagina for Sedaris to demonstrate how a woman might cleanse herself. And Sedaris made him proud.

getting oldermusic

Why I Still Want To Rock (Making a Band at 37 cont.)

Free tequila. It’s all about the free tequila. Not really, although it is kind of nice to have random strangers find real joy in giving me alcohol. It makes them happy, though I could not tell you why. Honestly, I just want to do something creative that no one has any control over. If I could paint I would. If I could focus my energies & thoughts to write a novel, then I would. If I could dance, then I would have a lucrative night job. The fact is, I can sing pretty well, so this is what I do.

I get to go to a person’s house (shout out to Sean) and jam out in their living room (sorry Deb & Cecil the cat). I get to write something that really only takes a few minutes to sort out, and I don’t have to turn it in to anyone for approval. It is lovely and blissful. I can’t get enough of it.

This Friday we are auditioning a bass player/back up singer. Then we move on to getting a drummer in on the game. And finally, it’s time for a gig. People really do say gig. And the thing about playing out is that even in the smallest room, with the tiniest crowd, someone is going to love it. I love that.

getting oldermusic

Making a Band — at 37

At 17, getting into a band was as easy as dating the guitar player and learning to play a little tambourine.  At 27 it was as simple as posting a flyer with tear off tabs at Y&T with a list of my “influences” and previous bands.  At 37, I browse ads on Craigslist, and I wonder if the kids that post “no geezers” are referring to me.

Truthfully, it isn’t crazy difficult to find people to play with.  There are just some trade offs.  When everyone in the band has kids (like some guys I sang with for a few months at the start of the year) then the kill time for practice is pretty early.  There isn’t a lot of room for goofing off.  On the up side of that, no one gets so wasted they can’t play.  Playing with people in their 30’s means they have a job and will show for practice, but it also means canceling practice when their son has the flu.  Frankly, that’s only because none of us wants to catch that flu and pass it on to our own children.  I still meet slacker jobless musicians, even people in their 40’s, but now I refuse to play with them.

So, right now, the status of my band-life is that I have found someone with whom I am writing new songs.  He is probably in his late 30’s or early 40’s (hard to tell when someone is a smoker or a sun-worshiper), and is a nice guy.  We both listen to NPR every morning, we agree on subjects political and artistic (not difficult bonding points among musicians), and neither of us drinks to excess.  We also agree on the sound we’re going for, which is a huge part of the battle.  Now here we are, about to start auditioning other band mates.  Cue the scene in the doorway from “The Commitments.”  Seriously, Netflix it.

moviespolitics & government

A Three-Dimensional W

Being a Brief Review of the New George Bush Biopic

Josh Brolin portrays George W. Bush in Oliver Stone’s new biopic, W., as a bandy-legged welterweight who is, in his earlier years, frequently drunk and, as President, seemingly punch-drunk as he staggers his way to the end of public utterances he never should have started. 

It’s a brilliant portrayal that rarely gives in to the temptation to caricature the President by taking his public persona and blowing up its least attractive characteristics.  As foolish as Bush often looks in this film, he resembles the actual Bush that all of us know, rather than the cartoon version that most of his critics have endeavored to draw. 

Throughout the movie, Brolin doesn’t impersonate Bush as much as he embodies him.  And the embodiment is psychological as well as physical.  As few of his legion of critics have ever managed to do, Stone and his screenwriter Stanley Weiser attempt to actually get inside of Bush and understand what and who (principally his father) has motivated him throughout his very curious life.     [Read more →]

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