Archive | December, 2008

Yesterday I watched the “Transformers” movie

31 Dec

And today my goal is life is to hunt down Micheal Bay and punch him in the face for turning this

into the shlock that is this

So, uh, let’s just try to get this straight, shall we Mr. Bay? So in 2008 the Transformers–a large part of my childhood’s fucking foundation, I don’t need to tell you–are some sort of mix of Dune-like scorpions and the Alien poor Sigourney Weaver has to keep killing, all of whom come to earth to look for Shia LaBouf’s (sorry, Shia, I only spell check names of actors who have not ruined my childhood memories) grandfather’s eyeglasses while ducking his parents–because what 10-ton robot without a personality wants to get grounded, you know?–all the while blowing shit up and finally destroying Megatron, who, I might add, is neither funny nor SOUNDS ANYTHING LIKE FUCKING MEGATRON.

You’ll have to forgive me, Mr. Bay, if the above synopsis leaves out anything important because I skipped about 45 minutes of the middle because, well, 90 minutes of unwatchable shit is 90 minutes of unwatchable shit. I don’t think I missed anything important.

In conclusion, Mr Bay, I hate you and want to punch you in the face. Please refrain from making movies about anything else from my childhood. Your terrible movies used to be funny to me. But now the amount of which you suck has become personal.

Bookmark and Share

Why do public figures keep citing that crappy Kipling poem?

30 Dec
"Kipling is a fuckin' literary goldmine!"

"Kipling is a fuckin' literary goldmine!"

The dreck that is “If,” and why the Ron Blagojevishs of the world need a better poem

During his December 17 press conference, in which the current Illinois governor turned a three-minute statement of innocence into a something close to Vaudeville, Rod Blagojevich gave the nation a surprise poetry reading. Looking into the camera and at the faces of the press, he recited the first seven lines of Rudyard Kipling’s poem “If,” apparently from memory.

In doing so, Blagojevich gave us the hoariest of poetic chestnuts, a poem famous not for its literary merits but more for the hoards of business execs and life coaches who trumpet it across this great country of ours.

In poetic terms, “If” represents what’s known around the literary world as a stinker. It’s a crap poem, an eye-rolling dud. It’s also one of the few poems that a large number Americans recognize. That Blagojevich felt it necessary and proper not only to cite “If” but to recite its opening from memory attests to the poem’s cultural power 113 years after it was written.

So how did Kipling’s clunker acquire so much cultural currency? And more importantly, aren’t there any better poems with which embattled public figures can shield themselves when facing spectacular business failures and federal indictments?

Those are groundhogs that were his eyebrows

Those are groundhogs that were his eyebrows

Actually, Kipling’s ode to bootstrap-pulling isn’t the worst poem in the world, or even of its time. The Victorian era turned out its share of God-awful poems. Unfortunately, the Victorian era was also the last time our nation read poems on such a scale so as to give them an esteemed place within its culture. So when most people think of poetry, what comes to mind is probably something close to lines like the seven that Blagojevich recited from memory:

If you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you,
If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
But make allowance for their doubting too;
If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,
Or being lied about, don’t deal in lies,
Or being hated, don’t give way to hating,

Just before the turn of the 20th century, poems were a source of not only mass entertainment in America, they were also bite-sized instructions in morality. Take Kipling’s opening. There is little in the way of unique observation or description; there’s even less to ignite any kind of thought. Rather, what’s there is Kipling’s prescription for a successful life. It revolves around an If/Then construction—32 lines of more or less the same plodding rhythm, no less—only to be resolved in the final two:

Yours is the Earth and everything that’s in it,
And – which is more – you’ll be a Man, my son!

A quick look at the poem—which insisted on forehead-slapping end rhymes and chugging along in that most popular wasteland of dull poetry, iambic pentameter —exhorts its reader (a man, naturally) by turns not to listen to anyone who may threaten to induce doubt but also to such fairly impossible actions as “force your heart and nerve and sinew / To serve your turn long after they are gone.”

Kipling was far from alone in writing this type of single-minded poetry. Here’s another popular poet of Kipling’s time, John Greenleaf Whittier, in “The Bartholdi Statue,”

The land, that, from the rule of kings,
In freeing us, itself made free,
Our Old World Sister, to us brings
Her sculptured Dream of Liberty . . . .

Sounds good, but what does this “in freeing us, itself made free” business really mean? Best not to look too closely.

Instead we are supposed to enjoy the poem’s vague sense of uplift, its catchy iambic backbeat and Whittier’s uncanny ability to rhyme “kings” with “brings.” And so goes the popular poetry of that age, which, incidentally, gave us W.E. Henley’s “Invictus.” It’s closing line, “I am the captain of my soul,” were Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh’s last words.

Just another "Invictus" fan

Just another "Invictus" fan

In general, this type of poem is what springs to mind when we think of poetry. The celebration of life, the da-dum da-dum da-dum heartbeat of each line, and of course the final satisfactory crash of end rhyme to signal the conclusion of the poem’s lone argument, usually, as in “If” and “Invictus,” the willful triumph of the individual over such nuisances as circumstance, laziness, and pretty much any other societal or personal annoyance keeping you from being the rich, successful man you ought to be.

But even Kipling himself later saw his poem for what it was—namely, a widely anthologized, empty-minded club with which to beat students about the head. In his autobiography, “Something of Myself,” published in 1937, the year after his death, Kipling copped to the poem’s greatest sin, its oversimplification of life, saying it “contained counsels of perfection most easy to give.”

“Schools, and places where they teach, took them for the suffering Young,” he wrote of those counsels, “which did me no good with the Young when I met them later.”

“If” has been translated into 27 languages and, as Kipling put it, “anthologised to weariness.” But is it any wonder that Blagojevich and his fellow walking egos of the world should keep Kipling’s 32 lines alive today? The poem contains everything politics and business require. Strong but necessarily vague language. An excuse to ignore dissent. And most importantly, a me-against-the-world individualism that reduces life to a singular view: Losers lose because they’re losers.

Blagoviche is just one type of person for whom “If” is the poetic Alpha and Omega.  In her essay “Vichy Washington,” Joan Didion reports that watching Henry Hyde’s performance during the impeachment trial of Bill Clinton had caused a director of the Independent Women’s Forum to recall “whole chunks” of “If.” The only business woman I’ve ever dated—who ran her region of a retail giant like Stalin in a tinkerbell skirt—loved quoting the poem, her favorite, to managers with excuses larger than their daily sales.

For the Type-A, Winner-Take-All, I-Will-Fight-These-Federal-Charges crusaders of our country—those captains of their very own souls—Kipling’s “If” will continue to be the end-all, be-all of poetry.

And that’s fine, I suppose. After all, it’s tough to rally the troops with “Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird” or anything by, say, John Ashbery. But do the Soul Captains really need to keep reciting such a shitty poem?

Not at all. For our the public’s sake, not to mention poetry’s, here are three other poems that Blagojevich and his Kipling-loving crew might consider trotting out come press conference time.

Ben Jonson’s three-line poem “On Spies” seems a perfect fit for the governor whose performances on federal wiretaps (and to one-man audience of Jesse Jackson, apparently) is either the stuff of Shakespeare or The Sopranos. Plus, it takes little-to-no-time to memorize and has the end rhymes that announce its poemy-ness:

Spies, you are lights in state, but of base stuff,
Who, when you’ve burnt yourselves down to the snuff,
Stink and are thrown away. End fair enough.

Then there is Robert Browning’s “Fra Lippo Lippi,” which clocks in at 392 lines. The Governor probably won’t recite this one in its entirety; however, the opening lines in which the speaker, a Carmelite monk, is caught cruising the 15th century Italian equivalent of Sunset Strip could prove useful. Blagojevich could learn a thing or two from poor brother Lippo.

In the space of 40 lines, our good monk moves from the “It’s not what it looks like” defense:

What, ‘tis midnight, and you go the rounds
And here catch me at an ally’s end
Where sportive ladies leave their doors ajar ?
The Carmine’s my cloister: hunt it up

to the “I have powerful friends” defense:

Why, one sir, who is lodging with a friend
Three streets off—he’s a certain … howd’ye call?
Master—a … Cosimo of the Medici

to the “This is all your fault” defense:

He’s a Judas to a tittle, that man is!
Just such a face! Why, sir, you make amends.

before settling on what passed in the mid-1400’s for claiming exhaustion.

And if those two poems are, like Eliot’s Prufrock (whom Blagojevich could take a few “Do I dare?” cues from), too full of high sentence, there are hundreds more.

It’s too bad that our idea of poetry is tied to an uptight, overweight British chick. Because even after Queen Victoria’s death (in 1901) poets have been writing great poems, even a few podium-pounders that the Blagojevichs of the world would do well to use.

But if the our cultural sun set on poetry before the first World War, then there are still poems in which corrupt public figures can wrap themselves when the flag gets a little too constraining. In fact, it’s a mystery to me why, when cornered with one’s own recorded words, the public figure under fire doesn’t turn to this small jewel within the penultimate section of Walt Whitman’s ode to the ego, “Song of Myself”:

Do I contradict myself?
Very well, then, I contradict myself;
(I am large—I contain multitudes.)

Bookmark and Share

“Idaho energy czar aims to harness cow pie power”

22 Dec

That’s the headline. Here’s the lede:

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Idaho is hoping to capitalize on more than just the milk emerging from its cows.

Bookmark and Share

Morning Briefing — It’s Back!

18 Dec

wood_chips

Well hey there! Since it’s 7am out here in Boise, it’s still technically morning out in the real world too, so let’s do some briefing, shall we? I’m up so early because I’m going to hockey practice today, not to play, but to watch a player about whom I’m writing a profile. Go Steelheads!

***

Please feel free to go and read this lengthy and substantial story about Boise’s minor league hockey team. Just kidding! It’s like three sentences posted by a high-school intern about last night’s game!

***

Speaking of Boise, apparently no one wants to come and see our little Bowl football game between turtles and vandalizers. Well, that’s not technically true. Twenty-four people want to see it.

***

This couple is goddless and penniless on Christmas. Let’s face it, who isn’t?

***

BSU is desparately looking for conservative voices to print in its student newspaper. So all 19-year old right-wingers, please respond quickly. Because The Onion only publishes once a week and we get so bored around here.

***

The best newspaper correction of 2008? We vote for the Badger Herald’s:

Due to a reporting error, the Feb. 7 article “‘Porn Nation’ to present tonight” erroneously cited a pornographic website as the sexual addiction survey. The correct website is www.mysexsurvey.com. We regret the error.

***

Boise Airport now has the fastest internets in the fucking world! You have no excuses left not to come see us.

Bookmark and Share

Club Trillion

17 Dec
This is what my people look like.

This is what my people look like, anthropologically speaking.

My boy Parsons, who is a high school teacher and a father [bitter], hipped me to Club Trillion, the blog of Mark Titus. He recommended it thus:

If you had any discernible basketball talent, I believe this would have been you, all the way down to the rap references.

Titus, it seems is the 12th man on the Ohio State basketball team. Titus’s story looks to be one of 12th men around the world. Last season he played 10 minutes and scored three points.

But a closer look reveals that he didn’t miss a shot all season. An even closer look reveals that he’s from Brownsburg, Indiana, about 10 miles from my hometown of Plainfield, and something of a great blogger.

Here’s Titus on the Butler game:

Unfortunately the Butler game prevented me from partaking in one of my favorite pastimes of gawking at the cheerleaders. I was informed by my mom that one of the Butler cheerleaders was my second or third cousin thrice removed or something like that. So essentially, we aren’t related at all. Nonetheless, I was fearful that I would find one of the Butler cheerleaders attractive, only to discover that she was the one that is related to me. That would have undoubtedly led to a realization similar to this. It was a chance that simply wasn’t worth taking and I was forced to turn to an alternative form of entertainment during the game–the game itself.

Yup, with the above picture, the 100 percent shooting, and the wit, the guy is definitely an Indy Westsider.

Bookmark and Share

The Iraq Occupation: A Quick Review

14 Dec

We started here:

Men beating statue of Saddam with shoes

Men beating statue of Saddam with shoes

We are now here:

Man chucks two size 10s at non-statue version of Bush

Man chucks two size 10s at non-statue version of Bush

Bookmark and Share

VIDEO: Bush ducks two shoes while maintaining creepy smile

14 Dec

Seriously, doesn’t he come up smiling?

And while no one can say he could run a country worth a damn, the man does have some nice reflexes. Yow!

Bookmark and Share

Duck!: Iraq journalist tries to assassinate Bush by throwing his shoes at him

14 Dec
"All I can report is it is a size 10."
Actual Bush quote: “All I can report is it is a size 10.”

Ha ha, this is a good example of incompetent journalists, a redundancy if there ever was one. Dear Iraqi typer: You can’t take out a president with your shoe.

Some highlights from this latest story of how George Bush is an embarrassment to us all and should really retired early to his all-white neighborhood in Dallas where he belongs:

  • Not one, but two shoes were thrown, prompting questions of a conspiracy because how do the goddamn Secret Service allow the shooter thrower to get two shoes off, huh?
  • The thrower shouted, “This is a farewell kiss, dog,” which is a fairly awesome thing to shout if you’re going to get beat up anyhow.
  • The trip to Iraq was super-secret. So secret, in fact, that accompanying journos were only allowed to tell their spouses and editors, two types of people which never spread information to a wider public.
  • It also took place during the day, which shows that Iraq is a less violent place. We also suppose that the projectile in questions was a piece of footwear instead of an RPG also shows that.

Bookmark and Share

Go buy a book

12 Dec

This from the AP:

Powell’s Books is asking employees to scale back their hours or take sabbaticals to cope with disappointing sales.

Powell’s is one of the nation’s largest independent booksellers. But like many other retailers, it is seeing the impact of the recession on sales.

Paul Constant of The Stranger rightly reminds you to shop at local, independent bookstore.

The money you put into local bookstores stays local, and it keeps us all from sitting, pasty-faced, in our apartments and waiting for another drab cardboard box full of books to be dropped at our doorstep. I cannot emphasize this enough: This is important.

That said, I finally found a good used bookstore in downtown Boise. Trip Taylor Bookseller is on 10th Street and completely worth hitting up. It has that air of organized disorder that all good used bookstores have, one that I cannot capture with my own books. Plus, I got out of there with a paperback Joan Didion joint and a hardback Calvin Trillin for less than $17.

Oh, and within their photograph section, they helpfully break out all the naked pictures into the “Nude Photography” subsection, which I thought was a nice touch.

Bookmark and Share

Market forces in Zimbabwe

11 Dec

11zimbabwe3-511

And we think our little recession is rough. From the NYT:

A ferocious cholera epidemic, spread by water contaminated with human excrement, has stricken more than 16,000 people across Zimbabwe since August and killed more than 780. Health experts are warning that the number of cases could surpass 60,000, and that half the country’s population of 12 million is at risk.

Bookmark and Share

Unlike BCS, NY Times does not snub Boise State football

10 Dec
Can you believe I went to bed 10 minutes before this happened?

Can you believe I went to bed 10 minutes before this happened?

The New York Time’s collegiate sport blog, The Quad, ranked this year’s Humanitarian Bowl match between Boise State and TCU as the third best bowl of the sham that passes for a post-season in college football.

A classic match-up of Boise’s high-powered offense against T.C.U.’s stingy defense. Don’t forget that T.C.U. held Oklahoma to fewer points than any other team this season. The scary part about this Boise team is that its much more athletic and talented than the one that upset Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl.

The best game? Florida v. Oklahoma, of course. Somehow USC v. Penn State got ranked ahead of the Humanitarian Bowl. Probably due to the ongoing drama of  whether 108-year old JoePa will find his way to the stadium.

So does the NYT know something that the BCS doesn’t. Yes, duh, because watching classic underdog Boise State, no matter where you live, is like watching Davidson make a run in the NCAA basketball tournament, and the BCS still ranks teams according to how good they were in 1997.

But Boise State is more than that. Remember two years ago, when that dude scored the winning touchdown in the third overtime on a trick play and then proposed to his fucking girlfriend? What the fuck was that? I guarantee Disney movie executives had a collective orgasm when they watched that shit.

I think Boise State should do something like this every year when they go undefeated and get shipped off to some halfassed bowl game. Like this year, a player can take a paternity test after winning the game, or notarize his will or something. Something life-changing, you know? Come out of the closet to your fundy Christian parents. Something with a little drama.

Bookmark and Share

Boise, the WaPo needs your help

10 Dec

Oh sure, you bring down Nixon and blow the lid off Walter Reed, but you can’t find a goddamn bar in Boise?

The WaPo needs your help, Boise. Don’t let Terps (fat turtles) and sports reporters (fat writers) get lost and stumble into some kind of backwards, Idaho-ish bar where everyone carries guns and has sex with elk militias. Because that’s what the East Coast Liberal Elite think you do here, Boise.

I am calling on all residents of Boise, Idaho, to let Maryland fans and a few reporters know about all the top spots to visit in Boise, Idaho, while we are there to watch Maryland play Nevada in the Humanitarian Bowl on Dec. 30. What are the best restaurants, bars, etc? What should we avoid?

I got one recommendation. Avoid the shit out of Mai Thai downtown. The food is worse than the pun.

Bookmark and Share

oh hey look … a poem

9 Dec

masthead1

Okay, I will seriously start posting interesting stuff soon, I promise. But check it out: It’s my poem, yo.

I should use this space to say thanks to Kevin Stein, who has a poem about working on a ladder, which inspired this one. I can’t remember the name of his poem off the top of my head, and all my poetry books are a’scattered across the office floor.

Ya’ll should check out Kevin Stein, by the way, because he’s the ma-fuckin man.

“Falling Off the Ladder” (I can remember the names of my own poems, it seems) opens up Stone Speak, my manuscript, which is MFA-speak for “dumb unpublished book.” It’s pretty cool The Brooklyn Review (which you should also check out, incidentally) decided to stick up my poem on its site. Thanks, ya’ll.

Bookmark and Share

December, a time for award-winning performances

9 Dec

Didn’t see this video on the C-VILLE site until yesterday. They usually do a video segment called “In the Newsroom,” in which Cathy Harding, the editor, talks to the person who did the week’s cover story.

Of course, I ain’t newsroom-bound anymore, so they did this, which I think was pretty hilarious. Cathy deserves some kind of daggone web Oscar for her performance. I  started to believe that I was on the phone.

And I thought, Oh no! What’s the matter with me?

You can check out more C-VILLE videos here.

Bookmark and Share

Feinstein: BSC is biggest national mistake since Iraq invasion

8 Dec
There will be blue

There will be blue

John Feinstein has significant beef with the BCS. Besides comparing it in the WaPo to, well,  Operation Enduring Fiefdom, he calls the bowl system a “train wreck.” He’s even got a little some thing to say about my (new) hometown Broncos.

Let’s throw Boise State into that wrecked train too. The Broncos went 12-0 a couple years after proving their program could hang with the big boys when they beat Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl. They finished ahead of Ohio State in the BCS’s own rankings. But, because the rules say only one non-BCS team must be invited to a BCS bowl (if ranked in the top 12), sixth-ranked Utah will go to the Sugar Bowl while ninth-ranked Boise State gets to play in the Poinsettia Bowl on December 23. If you are looking for a non-major bowl to watch that game, with TCU as the Broncos opponent, is far more worthy of your attention than Cincinnati-Virginia Tech.

Bookmark and Share

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.