-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
Douglas Tatelman on Zasu Pitts at the New Varsity,… pbridge130 on Life as strange as fiction in… Rob Murphy on Anita Wheeler Raiderette Fan C… Timothy Girard on RedVette Band, 1981 petriverse on Don Cherry at Dartmouth Archives
- April 2026
- March 2026
- February 2026
- January 2026
- December 2025
- November 2025
- February 2025
- November 2024
- July 2024
- June 2024
- May 2024
- April 2024
- March 2024
- February 2024
- January 2024
- December 2023
- November 2023
- October 2023
- September 2023
- August 2023
- July 2023
- June 2023
- May 2023
- April 2023
- March 2023
- February 2023
- January 2023
- November 2022
- October 2022
- September 2022
- August 2022
- July 2022
- June 2022
- May 2022
- April 2022
- March 2022
- February 2022
- January 2022
- December 2021
- November 2021
- October 2021
- September 2021
- August 2021
- July 2021
- June 2021
- May 2021
- April 2021
- March 2021
- February 2021
- January 2021
- December 2020
- November 2020
- October 2020
- September 2020
- August 2020
- July 2020
- June 2020
- May 2020
- April 2020
- March 2020
- February 2020
- January 2020
- December 2019
- November 2019
- October 2019
- September 2019
- August 2019
- July 2019
- June 2019
- May 2019
- April 2019
- March 2019
- February 2019
- January 2019
- December 2018
- November 2018
- October 2018
- September 2018
- August 2018
- July 2018
- June 2018
- May 2018
- April 2018
- August 2017
- December 2016
- August 2016
- June 2016
- May 2016
- February 2016
- January 2016
- December 2015
- November 2015
- October 2015
- September 2015
- August 2015
- July 2015
- June 2015
- May 2015
- April 2015
- March 2015
- February 2015
- January 2015
- December 2014
- November 2014
- October 2014
- September 2014
- August 2014
- July 2014
- June 2014
- May 2014
- April 2014
- March 2014
- February 2014
- January 2014
- December 2013
- November 2013
- October 2013
- September 2013
- July 2013
- June 2013
- May 2013
- April 2013
- March 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- October 2012
- September 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
- June 2012
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
Categories
Meta
Our neighbors Ivonne Baker and Nancy Pleibel, plus their dogs Picasso, Peaches and Ginger, enjoying Kaitlin McGaw from a safe distance Thursday at Cogswell Plaza
Posted in music, Plato's Republic, this blue marble
Leave a comment
Hudba to Terri Hinte
Not much of an item but I had a nice brief chat with publicist Terri Hinte of Richmond, Cali.
She works for, among many, many others, Mimi Jones.
Mimi Jones, also known as Miriam Sullivan.
Miriam Sullivan, born in the Bronx but actually, if you listen or watch carefully, and are trained, a West Indian (Barbados and St. Croix).
Miriam has a brother in L.A. named Hannibal or something definitely you hear more of in Kingston or Rosseau than Detroit or Atlanta.
Mimi Jones is her married name. Mazel tov!
Miriam who I met in 2000 as part of Rachel Z trio, which also featured Allison Miller.
Allison Miller a little birdie or birdland told me is now also a mommy! Mazel to them.
Rachel Z whose last name starts with an N.
Miriam Sullivan pka Mimi Jones not to be confused with vocalist Marianne Solivan.
Marian Sollivan who sings with, knows or donated Kickstarter to Dayna Stephens.
Dayna Stephens putting out a new album, “Peace” his fifth this fall, on his own label and probably not ChrisCross or Sunnyside, who released most of 2 thru 4.
Terri Hinte, who worked for Fantasy for years before going solo, who also works with and posed with Sonny Rollins.
The Bob Dylan novelty cd of baseball songs includes “Newks Fade” by Sonny Rollins, because Sonny Rollins apparently looks or looked like Don Newcomb the Brooklyn Dodgers pitcher, who had a hard to hit pitch called a fade like a curveball or maybe slider.
I was gonna try to stump Taylor Eigsti on that one, because I know that Taylor likes sports, or 49ers at least, and played something by Sonny the other night with Julian Lage, Dayna Stephens, Jeff Ballard (from Santa Cruz) and Larry Grenadier.
I did not speak with Taylor, but did catch up with — a sophisticated game of catch — the rest of his quintet and his mom, Nancy Eigsti.
Julian Lage who is sounding a bit like Bill Frisell; I asked Fred Hersch, pseudo-naively if he “recorded with Lee Townsend”.
On her site, Terri Hinte, rhymes with Splendid Splinter — which reminds me of something I wrote about Bennett Paster talking in an exaggerated Brooklynese — explains “hudba” which is European for something postive; I will edit to add.
Maybe this would be better suited under “A Sophisticated Game of Catch” (baseball-ese for the pitcher focusing on where the catcher is holding his mitt, and how he or she is calling the pitches, and not so much about what the batter might do, if he gets his way, but also this catching a show, or catching up with the guys and gals, or catching as becoming known; there is also something in The New Yorker humor blog making fun of Newk, but didn’t go over well, a bit outside or worse Chin Music).
A young guitarist at Berkelee, David Stern, approached Dayna Stephens last night and asked him to look over a chart or a transcription of something Dayna did or knows, and I held my super-smart-phone as a flashlight, plus snapped a picture of Dayna’s hand, which he said he was cool with me publishing here, at Plastic Alto. Either here or in my photo essay, below. Stern’s combo played an original ballad, called “An Original Ballad” or something — maybe someday there will be a David Sterns – Dayna Stephens project, or DavDayna SterStephens project. Dayvna Sternphens? Sort of a Shedroff-Redman thing….Oh, yeah, I was telling Dayna about Vida Blue and Pumpsie Green. Why shouldn’t there be a Montclair Women’s or Big Womens Blues Band? Dayna has an auntie who I am guessing can bring it, JoAnna Bullock I think is her name. Ledisi and Liberty ring-a-ding-ding. To it, birds do it yadda yadda yadda.
edit to add: I just realized that I had met Kenny Drew Jr when the Mingus Big Band did a series of events and clinics at Stanford a couple years ago. He died last week, at age 56. His father plays with Sonny Rollins in the clip above, and died in 1993. An announcer from the stage, maybe Taylor Eigsti, mentioned Kenny Drew passing and I did not put it all together until just this minute.
Posted in ethniceities, jazz, sex
Tagged kenny drew jr, sonny rollins, terri hinte, the new yorker
Leave a comment
Horsefeathers at JJ&F
Why we are at it, why don’t we vette the developer of Alma Plaza and his relationship with his grocer tenant, the one that filed for bankruptcy soon after opening, which is a public document and seems to say, according to another local paper that the developer-grocer relationship was less landlord-tenant and more backer-backee or worse; vette them and use that experience here, or do nothing, but look into it.
That story, Alma Plaza I mean Alma Village as prelude to JJ&F Plaza or whatever, is consistently reported with developer saying “I never collected a dime of rent from the guy, to help him” but could have more truthfully be reported as “I actually paid the guy to open his doors, with my profits from the upzoning on housing”.
Those who don’t know history are condemned to repeat it.
When the grocery does open at J.J.&F, be careful if you try swordfish:
Posted in ethniceities, filthy lucre, Plato's Republic
Tagged alma plaza, horsefeathers, j.j.&f
Leave a comment
Speak friend and enter
I hear Palantir has a new technology, call it a time-machine, with which it will be sending key employees back to 1974 to purchase homes in Palo Alto at the prices they deserve. A beta version of this over-shot considerably and apparently there is now a group of x-Palantir people actually living in the age of Hobbits.
(I wrote this on a scrap of paper and handed it to Gennady Sheyner of the Weekly, who had overplayed the thing about Palentiros and other Gen Y complaining about not being able to afford housing here. The note, on the verso, continued:
Mark Weiss, with apologies to Jerry Zuckheimer, J.R.R. Tolkein, Ray Bradbury, GS, H. G. Wells, the Goodby Berlin and Silverstein film circa 1988 with a homeless guy who was actually an art director, Kurt Vonnegut, Mark Twain, H.L. Mencken and Philip K. Dick.
edit to add: I meant to say “Robert Zemeckis” of course, meaning the movie director, “Back to the Future” an obvious source. Marty McFly, “Doc Brown”.
come to think of it: new nickname Gennady Shire.
by the way, in the books, “Lord of the Rings” by Tolkien, the palantir was used for evil by Saruman.
Peter Thiel is no Strider
edit to add, 30 minutes later but before a.m. coupa coffee:
I spoke at Wednesday’s meeting about putting a large park in Ventura, the most undervalued neighborhood in Palo Alto. Our Comp Plan — the topic of the public hearing — does stipulate that we want more parks.
I noted, however that when I ran my idea by “Ari” and his daughter, roller-skating at Peers Park on Park Boulevard, his reaction was “Good idea, but what I’m worrying about is my landlord just raised my rent $500 and I don’t know if I can continue living here.”
In my travels recently, collecting 65 signatures to qualify for the ballot, several other people told me the same thing: they may have to leave Palo Alto because their landlords are gouging them.
So why not study Rent Control? I love the speaker who said “I demand government build new housing but I don’t want rent control”. Doesn’t he realize the huge subsidies our government puts into high tech? Isn’t the war a subsidy of big business? (I am indebted to George Packer for some of this).
It’s still one-person one-vote here and there are roughly 40 percent of Palo Altans who rent, so I would think we should be talking about a measure that would help people who live here stay here, and not 2030 how much too much more to build.
This was also brought up by Edie Keating at the Housing Element meeting (she, like me, there as a guest). Ken Allen meanwhile started talking about it in opposition — fair enough. We should discuss these things more fully.
I made a joke to GS of the Weekly about “the age of Hobbits” I thought he’d print it somewhere hereabouts
Web Link
Steve Levy strikes me as a Worm-tongue creature, that’s a Tolkien reference, to Saruman, who used the Palantir for evil, and is therefore fair comment, appropriate, and don’t delete me bro!
Posted by Mark Weiss, a resident of Another Palo Alto neighborhood
4 minutes ago
addendum:
do not delete this, it is fair comment, and informational:
Gríma Wormtongue was the chief advisor to King Théoden of Rohan before being exposed as an agent and spy of Saruman.
I swear I am like the Dave Schultz of Weekly postings and deletions, Schultz being a hockey player famous for penalty minutes: I am probably the only person who posts under his own name and still gets deleted. Once I said, apropos of 27 University, ultimately the subject of a Grand Jury report, that the Weekly identifying uber-capitalist John Arrillaga as “philanthropist” is like remembering Genghis Khan as an advocate of family planning. Khan famously had thousands of offspring, a measurable portion of all a continent’s people, or so is said.
What does John Arrillaga say about the Comp Plan?
Report Objectionable Content
Posted by Mark Weiss, a resident of Another Palo Alto neighborhood
0 minutes ago
No, hilarious is that we the people are spending $1.7 million to a consultant in Berkeley to sugar-coat and twist the current General Plan or Comp Plan to rationalize and mesmerize the fact that some powerful entity wants to build more dense housing and more office complexes damn the torpedos.
How much rent relief would that same $1.7 M provide?
I’m a Keynsian but I think this should be discussed. If not now, when?
I’m a Marxist, but only because I think that rhubards cooked like prunes taste more like applesauce than Gail Price does.
take 3:
And seriously folks, speaking of Groucho and the Housing Element, we are way past tense and now living in bungalows:
What I mean is, this is a joke. The Comp Plan is fine. Or we should punt its revision until after the election.
The Buddy story
charles n_
tuck 97
miami of
amanda.boughman@tuck.dartmouth.edu
Mr. N_, Tuck ’97 and Tuck MBA advisory board:
I met the Ms. N_, her friend, and her friend’s dog in front of Peet’s Coffee in Palo Alto this a.m., on the strength of her wearing a Dartmouth pullover or sweatshirt I spied.
She mentioned that you are a football supporter, and in fact had hosted Buddy Teevens during his recent visit and appearance for the alumni group.
I posited that if you attended Miami of Ohio you might have known also John Harbaugh, the football coach and brother of Mr. Teevens’ successor at Stanford Jim Harbaugh, or known of that connection, at least.
(This came after a short lecture I offered, and my pet theory that Buddy is sadly under-rated by Stanford fans and Jim Harbaugh, as a zero-sum effect, over-rated).
I am writing you care of Tuck in that it is not obvious how to contact you via your bank. I have no other business or personal interest in contacting you, other than an enthusiasm for our Mr. Teevens, Coach Teevens, Buddy, which was sufficient to prompt this note.
Wah-hoo-wah, as we used to say and sometimes still do.
Mark Weiss
Dartmouth 1986
(former sports editor, The Daily Dartmouth)
PO Box 60786
Palo Alto, CA 94306
(650) 305-XXXX
P.S. A good friend of mine took his 15-year-old, a defensive stalwart on the Gunn High team, to hear the Buddy talk and reported that it had the desired effect of Sam wanting to study hard and work out hard, to someday play for The Big Green. I was disappointed, however to learn that Buddy did not tell what I thought of as the most compelling Buddy story, that I recall him telling the San Francisco alumni club, in 1988. Apparently when Buddy was entering high school he was rather undersized. He knew that one had to be 95 pounds to play freshman football. He weighed about 93. The day of the physical and weigh-in, he ran home from school and ate eight peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. As he stood in line with the other prospects, waiting to be examined by the trainer or team doctor, he grew anxious. When he was two boys away from the scales, he looked left and saw a stack of flat-weights, like you might add to the bench press bar. In a flash his hand darted out, speared a 2.5 pound weight and shoved it in his jock. He stepped on the scale: “One hundred pounds” said the doc. The rest (all Ivy QB, championships, coaching) is his story.
Bennett Porter v. Bennett Paster
Bennett Paster is a Brooklyn-based piano player and composer, who led an amazing jam last night at Stanford’s CoHo — the Stanford Jazz Workshop or Stanford Jazz Institute faculty all-star jam — featuring Julian Lage, Alvin Lin, a Colombian percussionist, Yosvanna Terry, Josh Thurston-Milgrom — and spoke in a funny fake accent and at times delighted some of the crowd by tapping some receptive high notes with two fingers ala Chico Marx.
Bennett Porter meanwhile is director of communications for Survey Monkey, a pre-IPO financial entity holed up (careful!) at Lytton and Alma, where oversize signs blink like the green light across the way from Jay Gatzsby, and she was a literature major at Colorado College or something like that before the sweet smell of success and maybe blue bottle coffee lured her, well after Greely, west.
Who would you prefer on a desert island, Bennett Paster or Bennett Porter? It depends on the quality of your upright, or grand or if you can stand more than four minutes….and thirty two seconds…of silence, if you are more easily Caged that Gated, so to speak.
Posted in music, Plato's Republic, sex
Tagged bennett paster, bennett porter, stanford jazz workshop, survey monkey
Leave a comment
Granite Alto
Photo essay about Stanford Jazz Camp / Workshop / Series / Festival / #firshir

This is immediately post-concert, or post-second set — honoring their “no photo” during concert edict — of Larry Grenadier, Taylor Eigsti, Dayna Stephens, Jeff Ballard, Jules Lage at 28

Santa Cruzio turned Parisian turned CoHo bum Jeff Ballard, the drummer, offering his advice to Obama about middle east conflict
Ivor Holloway is a Gunn graduate and fulltime staff year-round for Stanford Jazz Workshop and camps. I met him Saturday for the first time since October 31, 1997 when as a high school senior he and three friends, under the monniker Gunn Jazz All Stars, opened for Charlie Hunter at Earthwise Productions at Cubberley Community Center. Josh Thurston Milgrom meanwhile said he had seen one or two or those five Charlie Hunter shows here (with five different combos incidentally, including Pound for Pound with Stephon Harris, John Santos and Scott Amendola or was it Stanton Moore). Ivor’s dad is in political science at Stanford, and lives in Palo Alto but said he is not likely to advise my campaign unless East Palo Alto gets nuclear weapons.

Ivor Holloway, Gunn grad and Stanford jazz regular, negotiating with character from an Adam Johnson story
I have a picture of Dayna Stephens’ hand, which I will add later.
I have a video of Chris Sullivan, above, doing a three-minute solo, but I have no idea how to move content from new SuperSmartPhone to internet, or how to post anything but someone else’s Youtube to Wordress. I shot probably 200 photos or videos all in at Stanford Jazz Workshop. There are also several professional photographers shooting the event, which includes a faculty jam tonight — meaning good young players who are teaching the youngsters and fledglings here — and Chick Corea at Bing, which is probably sold out although you can get in with the right attitude, eliminating all your doubts and negativity. Keep it together. Keep it together. An impressive young man, a Berkelee student who also sharpened his business chops by manning the cd sales tables, Kingston Taylor of Indianapolis, IN, says Chick is his favorite player. A young guitarist named Chris Sommers of Houston, 17, said there is someone out of Houston I think James Davis or something going to upstate Robert Glasper and James Moran, I asked him to describe in more detail here, Plastic Alto or Granite Alto style (Chris Sullivan, among others, has the granite of New Hampshire in his muscle and his brains and embouchere).
Weekly has blurb on tonight’s Jam – -keep in mind that the concert Series what they call the Festival, the tale wagging the dog in certain ways, grew out of Stan Getz giving a lecture to the campers in 1982, and then they figure out they could be promoting shows and running a camp / workshop / institute and synergizing the various roles that musicians play. Kudos.
In this Stanford Jazz Festival concert, many jazz talents will perform together, including Chick Corea, Peter Erskine, Mark Turner, George Cables, Jeremy Pelt, Fred Hersch, Dayna Stephens, Dena DeRose, Larry Grenadier, Julian Lage, Jeff Ballard and others. Aug. 8, 8-9:30 p.m. $15-$55.
I have at least 100 shots of Stanford / jazz / workshop / camp but this may or may not be relevant to the set:
I love you, Lou Renza: or, The Sun Also Rises, my friend
I am with Mark Michael, or this version of him, above, in that I am concerned with process, perhaps more than what the outcome is. In that context I would say that 75 to 100 people at the Elks Club scoping meeting or whatever is hardly a mandate. Even 30 speakers last night, and about 20 of them were this so-called “new voice” should not be over-emphasized in that these changes — fairly radical, and part of a pattern, a commercial real estate rout and push for dense housing — will impact thousands of Palo Altans, who already live here.
There seems to be a sense that our General Plan is obsolete — Michael says it is from a previous century. It is not. We use it all the time, it guides all our policy, like our Constitution (as my venerable college– I meant colleague — in dissent, 2009-2013, Tim Gray said last night).
Palo Alto has a 120-year continuity; Democracy has a 240 year continuity; they are not obsolete. But we have to push back and resist the significant recent pressure to change by special interests, the builders. Ninety-six percent of those pulled — I meant pulled — by PAN now agree with this.
Horizon year? The sun also rises, my friend.
(I had to smile when my zinger to the venerable or uber-venerable former corporate law slickie turned commish Mark Michael includes a reference to an American classic I read at Dartmouth, in the 1980s. I admit it took me a minute to recall the name of my professor, Lou Renza.)
Isn’t it pretty to think so? (That I will actually re-read the syllabus, and use them in policy debate. I also said: those who don’t re-read the classics are condemned to live thru them).
edit to add: Lou Renza also later taught a course on Bob Dylan — I’d like to read his notes on it. I think I wanted to write him about it, circa 2002, maybe when I was managing Stew. Dylan apparently likes Stew and sent word once. 
Posted in Plato's Republic, words
Tagged bob dylan, hemingway, lou renza, the sun also rises
Leave a comment
Ballot statement take 2 (Mark Weiss for Council in <200 words)
I am running for Council in the tradition of Simitian, Fazzino and Yeh, who were student leaders here and evolved into public service. I graduated from Gunn( 1982) and Dartmouth College (1986) where I was an English major but also read philosophy, history and government. My campaign expands on five years of serious study of and engagement with local policy and the growing sense that leadership does not represent the interests of the citizens, and instead has been significantly undermined by special interests such as commercial real estate developers. Much of my 2012 platform was incorporated into the new Residentialist movement, the referendum on housing, and is consistent with the findings of the Santa Clara Grand Jury 6/16/14 about 27 University. I feel that my qualifications and values best represent the rank-and-file citizens here, especially those who are the product of PAUSD schools or are long-term residents. I also plan to draw significant support from environmentalists, parks advocates and the 40 percent of citizens who rent. I advise my fellow Palo Altans to lean in NOW on the Comp Plan ratification process. Why flush 120 years of history into the Bay for short term gain or greed? https://markweiss86.wordpress.com/category/platos-republic/
Take 3, with pagination and header: Statement of MARK WEISS, Candidate for Member, Palo Alto City Council Occupation: CEO of small business / activist / writer Age: 50 Education and Qualifications: I am running for Council in the tradition of Simitian, Fazzino and Yeh, student leaders here who evolved into public servants. I graduated from Gunn ( 1982) and Dartmouth College (1986) as an English major who also read philosophy, history and government. My campaign expands upon five years serious study of, and engagement with, local policy, and the increasing sense that leadership does not represent the interests of the citizens, and instead has been significantly undermined by special interests like commercial real estate developers. Much of my 2012 platform was incorporated into the new Residentialist movement, the referendum on housing, and is consistent with the findings of the Santa Clara Grand Jury 6/16/14 about 27 University. I feel that my qualifications and values best represent the citizens here, especially those who are the product of PAUSD schools or are long-term residents. I also plan to draw support from environmentalists, parks advocates and the 40 percent of us who rent. I advise all concerned Palo Altans to help steer the Comp Plan update process. Why flush 120 years of history into the Bay for short term gain or greed? https://markweiss86.wordpress.com/category/platos-republic/
P.S. Donna Grider called me yesterday to say I am confirmed, and sworn in, for the ballot as candidate, member Palo Alto City Council, with 65 signatures on my ballot (up from 30-something in 2012, but short of the 100 needed to trigger a rebate of my filing fee; I got 5,749 votes in 2012, probably need about 9,000 to be seated this time — Aug. 7, 2014).
Posted in Plato's Republic, words
Leave a comment








