From Ides of March to ‘Whan the Aprille’, earth day, Earthwise, beisbol et al or just giving it a sniff

The Chronicle reports that former Stanford star Alex Blandino may make the Giants this year. Here he poses with poppies by Slim Soumah, on Cali Avenue, which may or may not have music this summer and fall

Shakespeare said or repeated to beware the Ides of March but more significantly it was Chaucer who said “Whan that Aprille with his shoures soote/ The droghte of March hath perced to the roote” which 100 years later or more T.S. Eliot broke it down as HURRY UP PLEASE ITS TIME.

So a lot has transpired with roots and shoots these last three weeks and I will update from:

 

I have three confirmed shows for spring, all jazz, but at two locations:

 

  1. Or Barekat Quartet, Lytton Plaza, free show, Monday, April 18, 2002 6 p.m.
  2. Ben Goldberg/Scott Amendola/Todd Sickafoose Trio — sometimes and formerly known as Plays Monk, Thursday, April 28, 2022, $20, at Mitchell Park Community Center, 8 p.m., tickets at EventBrite, (rescheduled from January, 2022);
  3. Wayne Horvitz Sara Schoenbeck Duo, Friday, May 13, 2022, Mitchell Park Community Center , 8 p.m., $20 at EventBrite  (Rescheduled from spring, 2020).

Now my spring season looks like

  1. April 1, surprise show somewhere in Palo Alto, likely Lytton Plaza although I forget the name of the band, although they did one of my 20 or so shows last fall; tba;
  2. Or Barakat Arba — Hebrew for “four” – -he’s an Israeli although the rest of his band is Black; same as above; on-sale at EventBrite although “on-sale” is imprecise in that the show is free.
  3. Plays Monk with Amendola/Goldberg/Sickafoose April 28 at the Mitch – – sticking with the hard-ticket indoor concept, moved from the winter; $20 at EventBrite and going head to head with a sold out show four miles north in Menlo Park with Molly Tuttle. The music doesn’t really overlap — Todd played with Ani DiFranco and Anais Mitchell so he might know Molly Tuttle – heck, she could do a lot worse than cut an album with Scott Amendola, drums, Ben Goldberg clarinet and Todd Sickafoose bass. Ours ia a value at $20 compared to $42 for Molly and we throw in the chair to sit in for free. (I just bought a ticket to Molly’s show just for yucks — I guess I could punch the ticket between load in and my own show, or maybe creep over there after the load out, unless we hire an opener; longer story).
  4. Wayne Horvitz band May 13. This is rescheduled from 2020 covid pandemic era although truth be told — and Plastic Alto is nothing if not cold plastic truth — this might end up as a complicated package or co-bil or moved out to the plaza. A lot of my work is shifting to outdoors from hard-ticket indoors due to world turning, expanding and other scientific and solcial scientific effects and chaos. Chaos of choice we sometimes splay. “Splay” is a conjoined twin coined term or coinkydinkied here in Plasty that combines “say”, “spray”, “play” – -although in truth its an allusino ot Natiional Mackey. Of the band Splay and Them. And Wayne was in a band called Spy VS Spy with John Zorn so he is no stranger to be stabbed in the back by unknown assailants. Unless expressly forbidden on his rider. Splay per back rider. (…Splayperback rider….)
  5. Lisa Mezzacotta is definitely playing in May. I will edit to update the when and where (also resehcuedl from 2020, inf act she was on a bill with Wayne). The clay is the thing. Sunday, May 1 at Mitch Bowl, matinee.
  6. Lisa M will play, splay or shape musical clay in June — it’s alike a two-show residency. But she has other outfirts so maybe we wil see here every month until the crick rises proverbially and the April sootes and rootes give way to fall, the whole cycle. Either June 26 at The Mitch Bowl or Saturday, June 25 at Lytton Plaza, afternoon;
  7. Waybacks. That’s a band featuring James Nash of Stanford and Warren Hood from Austin and I think they are playing in June or July. Sunday, July 10 at Mitch Bowl;
  8. Marley’s Ghost an Americana band but not a local band any more due to chaos and economic pressure but they are Palo Alto -friendly and doing something here with Earthwise I am fairly certain in June, July, or maybe August but not likley all three. And speaking of the conjoined term “likley” one thing I like about doing shows at Lytton Plaza is that there are two or more ice cream parlors or counters near by — plus pizza and pad thai and a smoke shop that sells candy in the best Gandhian sense — and Earthwise is nothing if not counter-cultural.
  9. Sony Holland, a woman from SF and not an imprint of a multinational Japanese-European label is doing the music of Linda Ronstadt at Lyt on June 9.
  10. Charlie Hunter and some of his friends from the south are playing Berkeley for sure and likely Palo Alto in June. Stay tuned. Confirmed for Sunday, June 5 at The Mitch AND likely Friday, June 3 at Kuumbwa but produced by Earthwise. 
  11. Dayna Stephens who I met a Stanford Jazz Workshop played for me last September and recorded for my little imprint Lions With Wings and is playing Santa Cruz and Berkeley in June so I will do my best spunky promoter guy thing to have that tour pass thru the 650 and 94301. He is also, a little birdie told me, cutting a new track or suite for Lions With Wings next month with a well-known co-leader or super-side-man.
  12. shit, so here I am at twelve and haven’t even gotten to the focal point of my life for the next six weeks in the form of an Earth Day show at Mitchell Park amphitheatre Sunday April 24 around early afternoon which is billed as a Matt the Electrician and MC Lars show but we are likely to add another act or so. This is only the third Earth Day show I have produced under the name Earthwise, although Earthwise is a spin-off from Earth Day in Palo Alto. So I am three for 28 in terms of remembering my roots which is way below the Mendoza Line. If I do Earth Day shows in 2023, 2024, 2025 and 2026 I will be 7-for-32 or .218 – check back in four years.
  13. This is not really an Earthwise joint but I am excited for “Passing Strange” tonite in Berkeley – Shotgun Players — because it is a Spike Lee Joint and I was the manager for its creator Stew Stewart fka Mark Stewart or fka Stew at the inception of “Passing Strange” which workshopped at Stanford and at Berkerley Rep on the way to TONY and Broadway glory.
  14. I am seeing Macy Gray at the Guild and potentially bringing either a group of dancers, a group of students or maybe just a dance company leader and some of her family. And for whatever reasons we are focusing not just on the movement and the sound but also the costumes and the hair. Which is sort of a first for me as Earthwise since likely a Venus Opal Reese show at Art 21 in 2004. And the opener there was Brad Johnson partly because he had a pompadour. That’s in April not the cruelest month, at least 2022. Or not if I have a say, play or spray. Hairsplay – -that’s my nexted coil of the rhyme. What? Coin of the realm.
  15. Again, not my joint but I am seeing Miguel Zenon at SFJazz in May but mainly to say hi to his bassist Christopher Tordini who played with Caroline Davis here in January, the only production that was not cancelled due to force majeure.
  16. Likewise I am likely seeing Michael Wolff at SFJazz next Saturday unless something extraordinary emerges which keeps me.
  17. Sigor Ros is at Stanford Frost on Tuesday May 17 which means I am unlikely to do a show that night. I have a weird European copy of their debut cd which was left for me by Esbjorn Svensson when EST played for me. Rest in peace.
  18. Gaye Adegbalola not to jinx it but it looks like her February booked but never announced residency here will happen May 20, 21 and 22. Two or three shows.
  19. Gunn is playing Paly in football September 9 which is significant to readers of “Plastic Alto” but only useful to music fans if indeed I produce a jazz concert earlier that evening at Lytton Plaza. And if that is somehow not available I might try Cogswell, or King. And I will yield the rest of my time.

aster risk: Lisa Mezzacappa does not need my ideas but she could team up with the vocalist known as Shing02 formerly of Terracotta Troops. And May 1 is most likely when her show will be, as Bristle: Ewing-Schenk-Mezzacappa-Glenn. But don’t mark your calendar until it apears on Earthwise EventBrite edit to add: 18. Marcus Shelby — was scheduled for April 2020. And I’ve suggested about 10 make-ups either in person, in Palo Alto or in 107 different places in NorCal in honor of the Giants’ historic 107-win season. And so far I’ve worked with him only once, a cermony and event at City Hall aka Martin Luther King Plaza for Mildred Howard and her temporary installation of a “bottle house”. And not to jinx it but I picture him working with Eugene Robinson starting with the song “Step Right Up’. The rest of these are things that are more confirmed than the Marcus Shelby. 19. Will Bernard Flag Day, June 14 with four musicians. At Lytton Plaza, on a Tuesday evening. The times for my Lytton Plaza shows will vary but I am thinking mainly 45 minutes before sundown. And honestly although I am saying ides of march looking forward to April the cruelest or coolest, I could start as soon as next Saturday, March 19 like with 36 hours notice, like a sneak preview, the shape of things to come, grapefruits, small dogs, small ball, Tiger Woods. Isn’t there something in Shakespeare about the woods are moving or so they think? MacBeath dog breath. Be lionmettled proud and take no care who chafes who frets or where conspirers are. Macbeth shall never vanquish’d be until Great Birnam Wood to high Dunsinane Hill shall come against him humm baby humm baby humm baby come on boy, dam or dan. Andand: there is no particular reason I addended (“andand”) to put up a baseball song by Dan Bern called “Merkle” except maybe that I am going to Berkeley today to see “Passing Strange” a play by our mutual friend Stew. I don’t think I’ve heard of this song until just now. And I am not sure I’ve even heard the song in a sense that I just spent six minutes letting play on my computer yet the music is very loud in this cafe, Coupa, which itself is a shrine to the nearly 400 Venezuelans who have had more than a cup of coffee in the bigs. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1rrWBemxQHg To prove my point here is 10 seconds of what I hear write here write now: skip that, a woman walked into the frame and it looks like I am shooting her butt, speaking of perced roots and what not — so I will keep that 10 seconds on the down low. And its been two hours at 15 revisions later and I have these 19 edits and probably another 20 to go, and two unread papers and an unfed dog — small dog, bigger than a bag of grapefruits which I mention for no reason except perhaps Spring Training has a Cactus or a Grapefruit league — so here I’m being pomo or just lazy: Chaucer was born 600 years before TS Elliot Put an accent on beisbol Spanish for “baseball” Front quote for Chaucer quote that is “Whan 4. It’s or its from TS Eliot or T.S. Eliot Itals for “I have three confirmed shows…” Looks like colon Ok the drummer is Black. Savannah Harris. I need the practice saying Or Barakat, bass; Tivon Pennicott, tenor sax; Jeremy Corren, piano; Savannah Harris, drums. Our is a value; the reserved seats that is the chairs are sold out, the mezzanine; they are still selling the general admission; likewise I need to practice spelling Sara Schoenbeck co-bill social scientific allusino versus allusion ot or to Nathaniel Mackey Lisa is rescheduled in fact not inf act outfirts? we will see her Waybacks are pretty clearly aiming for Sunday July 10 at the Mitch Bowl; Chris Tordini bass — better fix that.

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Still snazzy after all these years: Jon Pareles of The Times on Dan Bern 25 Aprils ago

Dan Bern strums an acoustic guitar, sings through his nose, free-associates with sly inspiration and name-drops historical figures. He is also prepared to deflect the inevitable comparisons to Bob Dylan. In his late set at the Bottom Line on Tuesday night, he asked if the audience wanted to hear a Dylan song, then responded, ”Go listen to your records.” He did impressions of Mr. Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and Neil Young, demonstrating that he doesn’t sound exactly like any of them.

Still, he has learned a lot from them, as well as from Woody Guthrie, Elvis Costello, Loudon Wainwright 3d and Sting. Using time-tested chord progressions, he veers from comedy to anger, conjectures to shaggy-dog stories; he takes sidelong approaches to theology, science fiction, consumer culture, art, love and baseball. His lyrics bounce from image to image, seemingly at random, then suddenly pull together all the stray thoughts. Onstage, he was a wily savant, quizzical and wide-eyed but not naive.

One song imagined a more satisfied Marilyn Monroe married to Henry (not Arthur) Miller; another suggested that long ago, a bucolic Earth bartered its second moon to aliens for the dubious benefits of progress. ”I’m looking for one thing real tonight,” he insisted in a song that cited Santa Claus, Jesus and Vincent van Gogh. Some songs were one-joke drolleries, like one about Jews from Kentucky who ”drink our mint juleps from a kosher dill jar.”

But in songs like ”Estelle,” from his debut album, ”Dan Bern” (Work/Sony), he went deeper, examining the mysteries of obsession, friendship and creativity without losing his humor or sense of detail. For all he has absorbed from his models, Mr. Bern already has a sensibility of his own.

(When I was in Santa Cruz for the Desa show, I noticed an ad for not ”free beer” but ”Dan Bern”…)

Bw
While in Santa Cruz I killed an hour watching high school basketball and sat with Dave Barram a former Clinton advisor

And1: I did not catch these youngsters’ names but they seemed pretty happy about something: maybe they listen to John Sandidge’s radio show or indeed will be at the Dan Bern concert at Kuumbwa Friday next:

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Hey, Warriors, you can’t stick $1.4 billion worth of concrete and steel into San Francisco basin then say you added a tofu taco at the snack bar because you’re interested in ‘sustainability’

Warriors are 44-23 and can compete for the title but they are nit EF Schumacher, Francis Moore Lappe or Paul Hawken
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New Pueblo Pottery installation at Sacramento’s Crocker Museum that features work from the Weiss Collection

Scott Shields of the Crocker Museum sent along this photo of their new installation from their collection of Pueblo Pottery. The bulk of it is from Dr. Loren Lipson but it also displays works donated by my sibs and I in honor of our parents Paul and Barbara Weiss. My parents went to Santa Fe every year from about 1990 to 2015 and brought back as many as 25 pots each year. About a third of the collection is at San Francisco’s DeYoung Museum, since 2007. About two-thirds is now also at the Crocker. A group of Palo Altans is taking an art tour later this month. Maybe that tour can include this room. My mother’s favorite pot is a “Cloud Burst” orange Dextra Nampeyo that is at the DeYoung but not part of the current Hopi display. A notable pot of ours in this picture is an avanyu snake carved large red pot by one of the Ebelackers. Maybe James Ebelacker. The collection included four generations. We bought a black bear fetish from a 10-year-old kid, descendent from the Tafoyas.
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‘Man of La Mancha’ in a can

The original “Man of La Mancha” by Mitch Leigh, Joe Darion and Dale Wasserman, opened in 1965 on Broadway and ran for 2,328 performances and won five TONY including Best Musical. These two actors were dancing in their seat during a time out at the end of Stanford barely beating Washington, senior day for five senions: Hamilton (not the musical, but a transfer from Northwestern, Hull, Hull, Alison from Canada Jerome who played many many games, and Anna Wilson, daughter of a Dartmouth grad, like myself.

As a punk rock and luddite concert promoter in Palo Alto I would say they are laundering money as a hedge against the huge bubble in tech. Our libraries are open only 30 percent of possible hours yet the VCs dole out $1B each year, and unicorns suck up another $1B each year — that’s just Palo Alto city limits (which, by the way, we forgot to tax, 10 years in a row — excuse the digression: we have a tax holiday for billiionaires and trillionaires yet I can’t bid on shows because the art center hasn’t gone back to pre-covid staffing..).

When Sillerman bought out Bill Graham et al, people thought he overpaid; but he flipped the bundle and doubled his money. I ask: why would Bruce or Sting cash out?

May you live in interesting times; come as you are; I’m working, I’m not working for YOU!

I’m starting my Sunday with 90 minutes at my normal downtown perch, with three book bags; my main task is to finish the five newspapers I bought Thursday or Friday. After about 90 minutes the other day, I culled those down to about 40 tear-sheets. In about 20 minutes of focus last night, at a different perch, I culled those down to 20. I guess this fingers drill does not help the pile. And I grabbed about 40 more items to peruse. I set a timer.

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Reality Hunger @10

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Tigers/Titans vs Dolphins/Vikings

Three or four times per year, football, baseball or especially basketball, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, Nick Zaharias and his friends squared off against me and my my

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SHP-shooter makes 39 straight in practice but only 5 of 6 with season on the line; Crusaders slay Gators in OT

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Slopestyle, freeski or just peoples

There are actually 18 different Eileen Gu’s

I met FoxFace from “Hunger Games” at Coupa Cafe in Palo Alto – – three feet where I am sitting right now as I write this. I had no idea who she was — a movie star — I only saw her as a young person wearing a Stanford Shakespeare shirt. (Jacqueline Emerson)

I saw Chelsea Clinton maybe once in her four years here — she was always followed by a group of young-looking male and female fake Stanford students who were actually Secret Service. Her ex-boyfriend was also briefly a Palo Alto commissioner – although now I forget whether he was on Parks or Arts or Human Relations. 

Turkey’s third most famous person – and their best soccer player – -briefly owned a cafe here, on Bryant. He wrote his name and the search term “fastest goal” on my newspaper. (Hakan Suker)

At yet another cafe I met the parents of a current Stanford freshman – she is Columbian and danced for the London Ballet before enrolling.

Just yesterday, back at Coupa, I met a woman in a Michigan sweatshirt who said she competed in the Olympics as an alpine skiier. (Her name was B_, I think. L_ B__)

There’s a woman from Gunn, Joanne Firesteel Reid, competing in biathlon — 57th in the world. Go, Titans!

The world’s fastest man, Cubberley grad Bill Green, could not compete in the Moscow Olympics in 1980 because we boycotted. He later died young. His illness presented with an inability to move his legs.

Until you’ve walked a mile in Eileen Gu’s shoes, let alone completed as many flips on freeski or slopestyle, don’t judge her.
Hurrah for J. Zang!

 

note: slopestyle and freeski are now words. I can’t wait for Webster’s 12th to make that official. 

 

edit to add, hours later:

 

Jessica Zang a local high schooler who is also a columnist for the Palo Alto Weekly wrote a piece about her mixed feelings but overall support of Eileen Gu, the superstar breakout personality and case study of Beijing 2022 winter games, who was born and raised in SF but by a Chinese national single mom. Reminded me of my Dartmouth classmate, and dormmate (and briefly, 10 weeks my roommate) Peter Gallenz a world class Nordic skier.

Lives near Frankfort

Peter narrowly missed two Olympic teams, in 1988 and 1992. He came in 19th in the world, representing the US at the 1990 World championships, two minutes behind the German winner. He coached the US women’s Olympic biathlon team. And years after retirement from athetics he was named Dartmouth Wearers of The Green — normally its reserved for All Americas and Olympians but they inducted him for competing for the red-white-and-blue during the off years. Peter, I recall is of German descent; his parents emigrated here post-war. But he speaks fluent German and manages a large real estate portfolio for a German-Canadian firm. The Gallenzes in Rockford, Illinois had a different memory of the ancestral land than did the Weisses and the Levis of Chicago. But I am proud of my old friend and don’t think of him as any less of an All America or Dartmouthian. The people who beat Pete in 1990 were Mark Kirchner of Germany, Eirk Kvalfoss of Norway, Sergei Tchepikov of Russia, Herve Flandin of France, Frank Luck of Germany who was literally born to if not be a star then to watch the firmament, Steffen Hoos of Germany, Andreas Zingerle of Italy, Valery Medvedtsev of Russia, Valeri Noskov of URS — uh, oh, thin ice here on recent European history; Johann Passler of Italy, Juri Kashkarov of URS, Alfred Eder of Austria, Birk Anders of Germany, Pieralberto Carrara of Italy, Martin Rypl of Czechoslovakia, Roman Klinc of Yugoslavia, Ulf Johannson of Sweden, and Sasso Grajf of Germany. And by the way, I interviewed for the student newspaper my three schoolmates who competed in those Sarajevo games: Tiger Shaw, downhill; Dennis McGrane, jumper; and Glen Eberle, biathlon. And since we are on a slippery slope, let’s think a minute about the four-sport skier Alden Van Buskirk who died in 1961 but left some poetry people still read and the difference between “stale” and “state” — popcorn. You know, to munch. (pun on wrong German city)

 

and1:

well, well, well – but not jumping into a well real or figurative, as was suggested by my friend Eugene S. Robinson in his recent missive — I am going both solipsistic and self-similar and PoMo don’t you know – -herewith and hencelike:

These young people are being used by a totalitarian and repressive government, and elites. 

Similarly, Jessica Zang is being used by Bill Johnson to help Palo Alto’s development elites. 

if ms Zang is ambivalent about totalitarian governments she must love working for Bill Johnson and not being able to chose for herself who can comment here. 

you should really go and scrub me from my previous comments here, if you want to be a good Stalinist…

When I was in college we had a professor who said that if you are equally mean to all women it is not discriminating. 

His name was Vincent Starzinger and he’s dead now.

Is that funny?

Kudos to Jessica Zang for covering this important issue.

This is a minor point — but I wrote it elsewhere on PAW/TS:

The City of Palo Alto issued a “Message of Hope” signed by four leaders including the chief of police and the city manager and the head of the Human Relations Commission:

Web Link (oink is muted but it said this, in part – -not sure what I was responding to: Below is a message of community and hope sent from City Manager Ed Shikada, Police Chief Robert Jonsen, Reverend Kaloma Smith, and Pastor Paul Bains this afternoon:

In these uncertain and unprecedented times, our unified message is to elevate and uplift the themes of local and national community peaceful protests sharing loss, anger, and a call for change through equity and inclusion. Our prayers and condolences are with George Floyd’s family during this challenging time and as a nation, and we can only imagine the pain that they are enduring. We recognize the calls for systemic change that this and other tragedies demand. We must stand together in response calling for inclusion through peaceful exchange and dialogue.)

I was a journalist and an English major plus I have a blog, plus I post here, alot, and I care how words are used.

It troubled me that the “Message of Hope” was so poorly written.

Maybe going forward the City could hire JZ this writer, though she is in high school, to help write future official utterances.

Jessica Zang raises orchids when not writing for either Oracle or PAW

(There’s something in the council packet from a citizen asking Council to retain the current police spokesperson, who is not sworn and a recent hire, a woman of color…that’s a related point).

I recommend the Spike Lee movie “Do the Right Thing” from 1989 which gives a poetic and cinematic voice to an argument that maybe overlaps with @Latrelle but I cannot recall precisely if Malcolm X “by any means” necessary says something that is translated as “it is expedient to damage property and break the glass of the Apple Store on University Avenue and steal computers because a man was murdered by Police 2,000 miles away”.

I would read any texts that Jessica’s posters suggest that say that (“text” meaning books, articles, links not that you need a smart phone or my digits, dig).

What can we learn from all this that help our civilization and community going forward?

It’s great that teenagers like JZ (!) are helping to frame the dialogue here.

My original comment was along the lines of taking the author’s side and not judging the athlete. After being censored I flipped to pointing out the comparison between Gu being used by China and Zang being used by Johnson. 

My blog has the original comments plus something about a German-American skier I know personally who works in Germany.

 

I will sign re-up and step right up with a lift from Jessica’s work. It’s impressive for a high schooler but still a bit naive. 

Watching Chinese American freestyle skier Eileen Gu receive backlash from Americans for representing China, I realize that I can’t simply separate the Olympic games from these ever-present political divides. On the flip side of the coin, California-born Chinese figure skater Zhu Yi faces similarly heinous comments from Chinese citizens for representing China and falling on her Olympic debut skate. Because of the uncomfortable tension between the two countries, Olympic athletes often find themselves caught in the crossfire of foreign diplomatic warfare. And on a lower scale, I understand their pain. I face a difficult tug-of-war of emotion; on one side, there’s the country I’ve called home all my life, along with the troubling current events and human rights allegations. On the other side, there’s a deep pride for and kinship with my culture and family that I can’t ignore; it’s not a easy task to renounce the heritage that’s central to who I am today.

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The hoisting

For Spotify, the move into podcasting is the culmination of years of strategy to find a business that is more profitable than hosting music, for which it must pay about two-thirds of every dollar to rights holders.
excuse me? The music business spent billions developing talent, then Spotify, Pandora and Apple hoist like taking it ransom and then pay out to become host . there is no “I” in host but there is a $.

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