"Birth of the Cool" is an album that collects the twelve sides recorded by the Miles Davis nonet (featuring Gerry Mulligan, Lee Konitz and others) for Capitol Records in 1949 and 1950. The music is considered seminal. This blog is dedicated to that spirit -- keeping things "cool" by blog birthing. If you've got somethin' cool to share, blow on.
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Tone Matrix
~ tom
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Slumdog angst?
I think the problem is that Slumdog could not decide whether it wanted to be a cultural exploration with a lot of character development, or a gritty portrayal of youth surviving in the world's slums. In the former case, "The Namesake" (touted by me a few posts back) was far superior, and in the latter case Slumdog does not even come close to the incomparable "City of God."
Just sayin....
T.
Saturday, April 18, 2009
HBO 5 star alert for tonight.
T
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
The Namesake
Tom says a lotta stars go to this one.
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Norm Coleman - Give it up dude!
Do your part to make it happen ASAP.
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Kathleen Parker is OK
" What they're really asking is: Did Obama do justice to the fire hydrant?"
Later she notes:
And she finishes the article with this nice touch:Call me a mother of boys. Or call Freud, if you must. But would that life were really as complicated and confused as leaders insist it is.
Unfortunately, most of world history seems to have pivoted on the balance or imbalance of hormones, with testosterone presenting the greatest challenge. (I note this as a fan.)
In what may prove to be an epochal development, Obama seems to have his under control. He doesn't strut, swagger or flex. He doesn't even notice the hydrant.
A man who listens may be perceived as weak by those who prefer to talk big. But playground wisdom holds that showoffs are usually overcompensating, and the strongest one has nothing to prove. To answer the original question: When you're the big dog, you can afford to smile. The saber is understood.By the way, Kathleen took a raft of shit from the right wing during the campaign for her great, courageous rant in the National Review against Sarah Palin being nominated.
.... just sayin'
T.
Friday, April 3, 2009
Race bows to charisma and competence
This is the subject of a great opinon piece in today's WashPo by Eugene Robinson (one of my favorite OpEd dudes). Here is a sample:
In the cacophonous commentary about the president -- he's a breath of fresh air, he's too liberal, he's too moderate, he's being far too generous to the banks, he's some kind of closet socialist, he's restoring the nation to greatness, he's leading us to perdition -- it's striking how seldom race is mentioned as an issue or even an attribute. That's only natural, since race could hardly be more irrelevant to the multitude of urgent problems Obama wrestles with every day. Watching him in action, as he shoves out the chief executive of General Motors or exchanges small talk with Queen Elizabeth at Buckingham Palace, we witness a daily demonstration of the irrelevance of race. And that, potentially, is nothing short of transformative.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
43 reasons to never forget
~ tom