Beck strikes out 11 in season bow

4FA1B574-FB84-41FC-A643-AF26E51DBE14Stanford right hander Brendan Beck sophomore is one of the nations top hurlers.

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Clarence Thomas’ reckless disregard for intelligence

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New York Times says he wants to throw out Sullivan.

Thanks to the Sullivan decision, it is indeed hard for public figures to win libel suits. They have to prove that something false was said about them, that it harmed their reputation and that the writer acted with “actual malice.” That last term is misleading, as it has nothing to do with the ordinary meaning of malice in the sense of spite or ill will.

To prove actual malice under the Sullivan decision, a libel plaintiff must show that the writer knew the disputed statement was false or had acted with “reckless disregard.” That second phrase is also a term of art. The Supreme Court has said that it requires proof that the writer entertained serious doubts about the truth of the statement.

Justice Thomas questioned those standards.

“There appears to be little historical evidence suggesting that the New York Times actual-malice rule flows from the original understanding of the First or Fourteenth Amendment,” he wrote.

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Glory, glory Olatuja

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Alicia Olatuja, jazz singer, with Billy Childs and a Laura Nyro tribute, 2018

Alicia Olatuja, who was first noticed for her solo on “Battle Hymn of The Republic” at the Obama Inauguration in 2013, plays an intimate set at SFJazz July 28. A classically trained vocalist from St. Louis and Manhattan School of Music, she also can be seen in Seattle at Dmitrous March 28.

SFJazz announced 96 shows for their summer festival and sessions.

I might also peep out Rudresh Mahanthappa, and Mary Halvorson “Code Girl”.

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Alicia Olatuja at Obama Inauguration 2013

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The road not caken

A33CF0A1-091D-4D20-A754-4D770CFD6ABD.jpegThe first photo is of a piece of yummy looking cake that I decided not to eat although I did have brisket and matzoh ball soup at the new deli called I think Eleven 11 by Ruben. I hope to get back there to eat that cake. And so my headline is a reference to the famous Robert frosting

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I met about 50 people in LA that I thought I could do some business with and one of my highlights was to run into Bruce Solar now a honcho at APA agency for performing arts but I knew him from his San Francisco salad days absolutely.  He represents the rock band Cake  although their name does not reference a dessert thing you can bake but more like the idea that when you step into a puddle of Mudd with your boots on it is “caked“.  Or in that usage I guess the dirt on your shoes is cake otherwise the band would have five letters not four.

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Bob Cousy v Hamidou Diallo

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Bedel Sagat New York Times composite image printed in Monday Feb. 18, 2019 and online

 

And this one, maybe I printed it previously is related to an even earlier six or eight part drawing of Boston Celtics Bob Cousy, him demonstrating the novel dribbling technique. Diallo plays for Oklahoma Thunder and won the All Star Slam Dunk championship with a perfect score of 50 and a little help or lack of resistance from Shaquille O’Neal.

Screen Shot 2019-02-19 at 5.17.15 PMNot only have the players gotten better and more athletic but we can capture nine images instead of merely six, Muybridge call your estate executor.

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Duffy, Me and JR in a ’79 Granada Last Week

This gallery contains 6 photos.

  ee The last one is truly as if I were a fashion writer: I’ve mentioned several times, in passing, like in emails, that at Dartmouth in the 1980s, which was LL Bean and “preppy handbook” and conservative, I loaded … Continue reading

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Born on the South Side, would love to work with Bloodshot

southside1970

I saw something fly past my info stream today about Nan Warshaw. I met her in 2003 at SXSW when I was shopping three projects involving my then-client Caroleen Beatty. Nan said she knew Caroleen from Bedlam Rovers which toured with The Mekons and hoped she’d get back into the business (as compared to being in a band but also studying gardening and later becoming a producer for an internet content entity).

I might have met Nan Warshaw a handful of times and, although I have been out of it in recent years, hope to see her around.

I hope to do 10 shows this year. I hope to visit Chicago in either 2019 or 2020 and maybe produce a show there. (Did I mention my potential collaboration with J.B. Pritzker?)

Here, while sussing out my “Nan Warshaw” file, is my 2003 SXSW spy list:

Otis Taylor “Truth is Not Fiction”; soft tacos
Brad Kava, thanks for checking out my client
Bonnie Simmons, great panel, as always
Vienna Teng
Sam Kinken, let me crash a secret pow-wow
Charles Driebe
Dina LaPolt
Todd Gascon
Mary Lou Lord, and her indie world, busking

mekons

I have to admit, homer that I am, and slightly odd you see, I knew Bedlam Rovers before the Mekons

Suntan
Oxbow, drove 30 hours in a van to get there (I was their manager, but flew in)ST-37
Todd Roper, having the most fun in years
Jeff from Court and Spark
Chris Stamey, waiting patiently outside Yep Roc show
Glenn Dicker of Yep Roc
Jimbo Mathus
Peter Buck (changing a guitar string for Jimbo; bass)
Tuatara
John Stubblefield of Lucero
Cedell Davis, dangerous with a knife
essence, it’s a hit
Phil Roy, also a hit
Kenny Passarelli, getting Oxbow a deal
Eddie Turner
Eliza Wren, send me your demo
Frank Riley
Dawn Holliday, says she likes Eugene
Tracey Buck
Dana from Slims
Adam Kline
Seymour Guenther
Ruthie Foster
Cyd Cassone
Jason Coltun
Mara
Christine Albert
Poppy 3 (St. Louis)
Malcolm Welbourne aka Papa Mali
Steve Gumble
Gladys Mae Bullock and her banana bread
Aaron Axelson
Ken Irwin
Glen Morrow,
Nan Warshaw, likes Bedlam Rovers (and Waycross?)
Mike Mills
Dan Strachota
Laura Viers
Oxbow
The Continental
Raevonettes
Dirty Power, at Emo’s
Bellyachers
Minus 5
Mayflies
guy with Superchunk shirt
Davis McLarty
Mike Gormley, LA Personal Development
Tribe 8
Skeleton Key
Mekong River, good Thai food on 6th st
Las Manitas
Golden Shoulders
Patricia Vonne
South Austin Jug Band
“Screen Door Jesus”
Convoy
Melody Johnson, spoken word artist
Craig Stewart
Swarm of Angels
Stubbs BBQ
Neil Pollack Invasion
Wavy Gravy
Mark Margolis
Cynthia Shih
Kathleen Edwards
Soulive (just the line, not the band)
Chris Xefos, fan of Stamey
Jayhawks roadie and cases at Hyatt
NOFX street team
Fabulous Disaster
The Donnas (on A.P., Soundcheck and YM covers)
Scott McCaughey, unplugged
Jon Cleary, at 8 a.m.
KGSR morning show from Four Seasons
Del Castillo(Mark and Rick, and Bud)
Doppler Records
Thad Cockrell
Congress Street bridge and Bat (sculpture)
Austin Barn Dance (every Sunday full moon)
Derek Hess
Frank Kozik
Gregg Gordon
Vida Lee
Chris Card
Renee Woodward, her music in “Screen Door”
Leni Stern, and here little cds
Casey Burns
Ben Sollee on cello
Brooke Wentz
Benjamin Laski
Bill Bragin, who is a fan of Stew
Adam Sloat, with the Waking Hours
dork
Singapore Sling (Iceland)
Opal Divine’s
Jason Austin
Elizabeth Brooks
John Wesley Harding
Al Bunetta
Rory Felton and Josh Grabelle(Militia Group and
Trustkill)
John Doe
Duff Bershback

I don’t know “If List of Names Makes a Memoir”, but if you hum a few bars maybe I can pick it up. (Which is a refererence to a Zizek joke about do you know “Why did the Monkey Dunk His Balls in My Drink”? Et tu Zizek Warshaw Doe Bershback? Bershback Mountain? This is where I came in..This is wherein I came?

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The once and future champion of the world, Caroleen Beatty, here at The Makeout Room Holiday Party, 2018

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I’ve used the word ‘memoir’ 65 times here, one-third of which have been since registering for Lynn Stegner’s class

I will have to look into this.

I remember it well.

You wore blue, the Germans wore black.

He said, “but my wife is not in a wheel chair”.

Distribution of word “memoir” in Plastic Alto, by year:

2019: 15, (in 51 days)

2018: 12

2017: 0

2016: 1

2015: 6

2014: 15

2013: 3

2012: 7

2011: 5

2010: 1

POINT REYES STATION, Calif. — Mostly, they called him Wally. The use of Wallace Stegner’s nickname was in keeping with the familiar, almost familial tone of last weekend’s gathering of writers — mostly Western writers — seeking new relevance in the work of this protean author some 15 years after his death and a month after what would have been his 99th birthday.

But the use of Stegner’s nickname, and the informal look of the down vests and jeans worn by many of the speakers and their audience of 250, could not dispel the sense of religiosity that hovered over the gathering.

Wallace Stegner wrote mostly in and about the West. Before World War II he embarked on a quiet campaign of tearing down the dime-store myths fostered by 19th-century Currier & Ives prints and 20th-century Zane Grey novels. He also chronicled the environmental consequences of ideas like Manifest Destiny. The land was almost its own character in much of his fiction.

As the author Barry Lopez put it, “One of the great things he made us understand was that history and geography were part of the story.”

Heirs of Western landscapes, like those who gathered among the elongated green hills and the ranches along the Northern California coast here, seemed to regard him as speaking for them.

Or, perhaps more precisely, speaking for them and their land. The weekend conference, sponsored by the store Point Reyes Books, was called “The Geography of Hope.” The phrase comes from a 1960 letter Stegner wrote in support of the Wilderness Act, which Congress passed four years later. In the decades since, it has been widely quoted, and the words hung, like a truncated Bible verse, over the speakers at the West Marin School gym, where much of the event took place.

The event was partly a discussion of Stegner’s works, particularly the novels “Angle of Repose” and “Crossing to Safety” and the biography of the explorer John Wesley Powell, “Beyond the Hundredth Meridian.” It was also partly a homage to Stegner by writers he influenced, like Mr. Lopez, the author of “Arctic Dreams.” And it was a statement that Western writers must create their own settings for the discussion of their craft.

“There is no 92nd Street Y in the American West,” said Philip L. Fradkin, the author of a new biography of Stegner (“Wallace Stegner and the American West”), as he sat outside the school. The conference marked the appearance of two new Stegner-related books: Mr. Fradkin’s biography and a collection of Stegner letters selected and edited by the writer’s son, Page Stegner.

Mr. Fradkin lives in a small town, Inverness, just north of here in western Marin County, as does Robert Hass, the former United States poet laureate. With Steve Costa, one of the proprietors of Point Reyes Books, they organized the conference in connection with local and national land conservation groups like the Marin Agricultural Land Trust.

The sense of the West and its people as a world apart, reduced to a cardboard fantasy by Easterners who had never been there, and the parallel hunger of Westerners, like Stegner himself, to drink in the Eastern culture that they had missed in childhood were ideas that came in and out of the discussions.

Stegner’s daughter-in-law, the novelist Lynn Stegner, said that the title of “Crossing to Safety” “echoes the same theme he was always interested in — the East, the West, the orphaned Westerners being taken in and taken care of by the cultured Eastern family.” But Carl Brandt, Stegner’s former agent, said that Stegner was “identified as a Western writer in a way that’s partly unfair.”

“You look at the fiction, and it’s not Western,” he said. “It’s truly about people. It could be done as well in Vermont.”

The East’s perceived dismissal of Stegner’s Western-ness was another leitmotif during the conference. Mr. Fradkin made repeated references to the failure of The New York Times Book Review to publish a review of “Angle of Repose” — and the dismissive column about it in The Times (“a Pontiac in the age of Apollo, an Ed Muskie in the fiction sweepstakes”) written by John Leonard after the book was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1972.

Stegner was, however, embraced by many of the writers he worked with as students or fellows in the creative writing program he founded at Stanford, which produced authors like Wendell Berry, Edward Abbey and Robert Stone. The exception was Ken Kesey, with whom Stegner had a bitter falling out. Kesey-like figures and the drug-centric, elder-bashing 1960s, which helped speed Stegner’s departure from teaching, are the subjects of withering commentary in later novels.

If the Eastern literary world and the ’60s youth movement were burrs under Stegner’s saddle, they did not distract him from a central theme of both his fiction and nonfiction: the way the West works, in fact, not in myth. Often his work gave early voice to ideas that are now conventional wisdom, like the centrality of water politics to the region.

Mr. Hass said he learned from Stegner that “the basic fact of life in the West was aridity, was dryness.”

“All Western politics are water politics in the end,” Mr. Hass said, “as all politics will be water politics instead of oil politics in the future.”

Remarks like these ensured that the conference never strayed too far from its overarching environmental theme. Near the end there was a reading of Stegner’s Wilderness Act letter, which ends: “We simply need that wild country available to us, even if we never do more than drive to its edge and look in. For it can be a means of reassuring ourselves of our sanity as creatures, a part of the geography of hope.”

edit to add, Wednesday 6:40 I am adding to this as class meets, discussing John McPhee “Draft Number 4”. Good to go to dictionary, which parses more than Roget’s, she says.

 

and1: Heather, who wore a Ramones shirt to class, recommends Elizabeth Gilbert TED:

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Sixteen million viewed this

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Memoir of a crooked ref

I love basketball and I love memoir — I’m taking Lynn Stegner’s famous course — so I cannot resist a quick cut and paste, based on something in the Yahoo feed, about a crooked referee NBA and his memoir from 2009 which was supposedly pulled but an excerpt remains, reprinted here. I’m also hoping to write about the photo run in the New York Times showing the top All Star NBA dunker, in six or so merged stop-action images, crossed with the famous illustrations from Sports Illustrated circa 1951 that shows in detail Bob Cousy’s invention of the behind the back dribble. (I’ve run it before, I think).

I’m also hoping to post something about noticing just now on my Apple SmartPhone that the lyrics to Boots Riley the Coup soundtrack to “Sorry to Bother You” spells a formerly banned word that conures up excrement — four letters — but using growlix or astericks or dashes to obscure the formerly common word for Black People. So now it’s okey to say “shit” but not “n_____” or “n____”? N-word. I just think its weird.

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words by Boots, censorship by the man

I’m meaning to anecdote or addend my essay about Boogie Cousins to recount the thing about him not liking or getting Chinese astrology. I wonder what sign he is? I used to think I was dragon but am actually rabbit or hare or cat if Vietnam.

And I was working on another photo essay.

I’m also hoping to read Wallace Stegner story about the Big Sky country, having just read his memoir of “Great Falls”. Also, since I tried to be influenced it when I submitted to Lynn’s class an experimental epistolary about my freshman year at Dartmouth in 1982, to read anew WS story about “Canby” and his college days, or somebody’s or all of ours.

“Two weeks before the 2003-04 season ended, Bavetta and I were assigned to officiate a game in Oakland. That afternoon before the tip-off, we were discussing an upcoming game on our schedule. It was the last regular-season game we were scheduled to work, pitting Denver against San Antonio. Denver had lost a game a few weeks prior because of a mistake made by the referees, a loss that could be the difference between them making or missing the playoffs. Bavetta told me Denver needed the win and that it would look bad for the staff and the league if the Nuggets missed the playoffs by one game. There were still a few games left on the schedule before the end of the season, and the standings could potentially change. But on that day in Oakland, Bavetta looked at me and casually stated, ‘Denver will win if they need the game. That’s why I’m on it.'”

“I was thinking, How is Denver going to win on the road in San Antonio? At the time, the Spurs were arguably the best team in the league. Bavetta answered my question before it was asked.

‘Duncan will be on the bench with three fouls within the first five minutes of the game,’ he calmly stated.

Bavetta went on to inform me that it wasn’t the first time the NBA assigned him to a game for a specific purpose. He cited examples, including the 1993 playoff series when he put New Jersey guard Drazen Petrovic on the bench with quick fouls to help Cleveland beat the Nets. He also spoke openly about the 2002 Los Angeles-Sacramento series and called himself the NBA’s ‘go-to guy.’

As it turned out, Denver didn’t need the win after all; they locked up a spot in the playoffs before they got to San Antonio. In a twist of fate, it was the Spurs that ended up needing the win to have a shot at the division title, and Bavetta generously accommodated. In our pregame meeting, he talked about how important the game was to San Antonio and how meaningless it was to Denver, and that San Antonio was going to get the benefit of the calls that night. Armed with this inside information, I called Jack Concannon before the game and told him to bet the Spurs.

To no surprise, we won big. San Antonio blew Denver out of the building that evening, winning by 26 points. When Jack called me the following morning, he expressed amazement at the way an NBA game could be manipulated. Sobering, yes; amazing, no. That’s how the game is played in the National Basketball Association.”

To me game-fixing seems like something from the 1950s NCAA or of course the 1919 World Series — and come to think of it I had a long talk by phone with a guy from Marin who did or is doing a big installation in Chicago about the Black Sox (and he doesn’t seem to think it was a thing).

I’m filing this under “words” and “filthy lucre” and “sports”.

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Nine things in the papers

“Harris Resists Easy Definition: Treading Lightly on the Issues as a Top Lawyer” NYT by Kate Zernike

“Epic tale of catastrophic change: turmoil wreaked by the Colombian drug trade upends anindigenous Family in a cliche-defying story” by A.O. Scott

“Birds of Passage Review” NYT

”Choir Boy” Jonathan Burke of Tarell Alvin McCraney by Gia Kourlas speakingdance NYT “Giving a Musical a Jolt Of Black Tradition “

”city of Angels, Old-School Style”

”Proof That Virtuosity Can Be Funny:  A star pianist swapped concertos  for sketches with a musical comedy duo“  Yuja Wang w Igudesman & Joo  by Joshua Barone

ed8ta: Well, actually that’s 40 things, “Forty Things I Ripped From The Media and Then Carried Around in My Bag for A Week”

Can I do it by memory: Kamala Harris, Colin Kaepernik, Wealth Matters Art Collectors, Columbian gangster movie, black dance, costumes for Van Halen show, old LaLa restaurants, Rothko deaccession, Thundercat, Yuja Wang comedy bit, EPL tables, NBA Allstars roster, current Broadway shows table, (slowing) Eryka Badu, The Grammy’s various (let’s call it 5); also: Black Panter page 1 LA Times wraparound ad – for Academy Awards, Dementia op ed by M Shriver, art market op ed; Manchester City – Chelsea; SNL Bezos penis jokes; “The Light” w Belcher and Masden; “Roy Hutchinson, 67, a Restorer of Early Sound Films:” full page ad for Tanglewood; “Everything is Wonderful”; New York Library Dance Division; “One Child Nation” at Sundance re China for the interesting poster; “In Lagos, The Art of The Hustle”;  Emirati Princess (who) Tried to Flee; ok, 32, but i do have another 50 non-curated sections and tear-sheets in my bag.

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Lynn Stegner class update:

I bought 3 Wallace Stegner books, in lieu of accessing the class online bibliography and reserve desk: the newish anthology of essays edited by Page Stegner, her recently deceased husband and teacher, at 80 — to Wally’s 110; Mormon’s partly because it has three “Greats”; a pocket edition of “Recapitulation” The essay book was signed by Page, and featured an essays “A Year in Great Falls” that recounts the author’s new school in a new state and country, where he went to school in his tattered play clothes and had his lunch and jacket stolen by bullies, until a larger kid intervened in befriended him; the author 60 years later or so lamets that he can’t remember his protector’s name, only his ethnicity; that bit reminds me for some r

 

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