Monday, July 31, 2023

Free My Mind from the 2023 Blues

My head is not in a good spot right now.

I tried taking most of this month off to get some writing done - or even edit some writing projects down to a manageable self-published thing - but... I couldn't focus.

I find myself just sitting in the recliner, feeling overwhelmed, not feeling inspired or motivated, and just... not there.

I really noticed I'm having serious problems by how I'm NOT even using these blank hours/days to binge-watch any of the geek shows out there. The money going to several streaming services right now are just WASTED as I zone out. I even rented a copy of Season One of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds back before 4th of July... and I still haven't even popped Disc One in to the player. And I've heard the show is good, I mean Third Season of Next Gen good. What the hell is stopping me?

It was that realization: My chronic depression is back, it's severe, and I really need to find someone on my Blue Cross HMO to see about treatment and getting out of this funk.

I'm at the point where a massive announcement of donald trump getting indicted in BOTH Georgia and Washington DC this week won't get me in a better mood. Well, okay, actually yeah I would be highly buzzed if that happens, but I know I'll be back in the recliner getting moody again.

Alas.


Sunday, July 30, 2023

I Survived Tampa Bay Comic Con 2023

I've not gone to as many of these comic cons over the past few years - PANDEMIC, people! - and I skipped last year's Tampa Bay Comic Con because I didn't see many celebrities of personal interest. This year, I skipped Orlando MegaCon's for mostly that reason - also because they were in the North/South Pavilion again and I hated all the walking I had to do for that one to get to the discussion panels I wanted to visit - and so decided to go to this year's Tampa Bay con to keep my interests peaked.

This time around, my nephew Drew's birthday fell on the same day, and there was a breakfast event for the family, meaning I delayed my arrival to the comic con just as the nearest parking garage filled up (whoa). Previous experience is that the lines to get in are insane even BEFORE the opening - they start taking in the outside line around 9:00am to take tickets, and open the vendor's floor at 10:00am - so when I got there by 10:30am the line was still stretched across the Tampa Riverwalk and it took another 30 minutes just to get into the air conditioning.


Nephew Drew was planning to attend as well, but was going with friends from university and coming in later (I warned him), and so he was off on adventures of his own (although we agreed to meet up so I could buy him a birthday present of his choice). Here then was how the comic con looked.








As I am not an autograph hound, I wasn't there for the celebrities doing the signings and the meet-and-greets. Alas, I discovered that this year's con did not include many discussion panels, at least not with artists or authors of interest. The one writing panel was about working with magic rules in fantasy works, something I've already studied and not much into my leaning towards scifi. It had also started at 10:30am and was almost over by the time I got there by 11:25am (argh).

I did get to see a giant Pikachu, however.


WHERE IS YOUR GOD NOW???

Also, I saw a Grimace. He was there to tempt more victims to his #GrimaceShake experience.


Nephew Drew showed up by the time my stomach was growling, so I met him in line for some food in the first floor cafe area, along with his friend (Drew, you're gonna need to remind me his name and his cosplay, thank you).


No, Drew did NOT go as Oppenheimer in honor of the Barbieheimer Experience. He didn't have the fedora and stove pipe for props yet. He did come as a character from a 1979 Japanese live-action movie called The Man Who Stole the Sun - my nephew has gotten into anime/Japanese film in a big way - so be grateful Drew showed up in a suit and tie.

There was, rather shocking to me, a decided lack of Oppenheimer cosplay: Usually the cosplayers will dress up in the hottest hippest geek trend to show off their costuming skills. I barely saw any Barbies - I counted five - and the only thing I could think of was that the film's production efforts of taking every pink outfit on the planet was the reason why there wasn't enough pink clothing to go around.

Maybe next year.

Anywho. Back to the visuals!





There were a couple of things missing this year - I did not see an R2-D2 display area (there was only one R2 rolling the floor and I could not find the time to pose with him) and I did not find a Lego display area. I just realized I didn't see the 501st cosplaying that extensively this year. I wonder if they were all up on the 4th floor which I did not visit because it was all stairwells and I didn't care to look for elevators.

None of the celebrities doing the main auditorium discussions drew my interest, so this was kind of a quiet comic con for me. Drew did find his birthday present - a Lego kit - and I hope he has fun putting it together.

Here's hoping I find more interest to intrigue me for next year's comic con.



Sunday, July 23, 2023

The Whitewash of History, on DeSantis' Orders

Update: Thank you Batocchio for including this article on Crooks & Liars' Mike's Blog Round-Up! Everyone visiting, please leave a comment below, or Tweet me at... at... oh, right. Twitter's dead.


This past week bore witness to the next stage of Ron DeSantis' open war against Woke (or Critical Race Theory, or Thou Shalt Not Shame our White Boys): The utter disassembly of American/Florida History when it comes to talking about race-based slavery in our nation's development. 

What DeSantis wants to impose - through his hand-picked Board of Education - grade school class studies teaching that "slavery helped the slaves develop work skills" as a "personal benefit" for gainful employment. You're not reading that wrong, that's how the regional and national media are reporting it (this link via CBS News):

Florida's 2023 Social Studies curriculum will include lessons on how "slaves developed skills" that could be used for "personal benefit," according to a copy of the state's academic standards reviewed by CBS News. 

The lessons in question fall under the social studies curriculum's African-American studies section, and be taught to students in sixth through eighth grade, according to the state standards. 

The lessons for that grade level will include teachings on understanding the "causes, courses and consequences of the slave trade in the colonies," and instruction on the differences and similarities between serfdom and slavery, the curriculum says. Students will also be asked to describe "the contact of European explorers with systematic slave trading in Africa" and look at the history and evolution of slave codes. 

The line about "personal benefit" is included as a "benchmark clarification" to a lesson that asks students to "examine the various duties and trades performed by slaves," such as agricultural work, domestic service, blacksmithing and household tasks like tailoring and painting. 

My first reaction hearing the news: THIS IS DESANTIS' AND THE FAR RIGHT REPUBLICANS IDEA OF PUTTING A POSITIVE SPIN ON HUMAN CHATTEL SLAVERY, WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK.  (yes it was all internal CAPS LOCK screaming)

My following reaction was a bit calmer and more of an earnest question: "Will these classes also detail the physical and emotional traumas that slavery inflicted on the men, women, and CHILDREN who were chained up, collared like animals, and whipped for the sadistic enjoyment of the masters?" 

Will the study materials include the photographs of the scars on their backs?

Say hello to the BENEFITS of slavery.
"Whipped Peter" - photo from the National Gallery

Here is DeSantis - here is the WHOLE OF THE MODERN REPUBLICAN PARTY, finally proving themselves the Party of John C. Calhoun and not the Party of Lincoln - trying to make it sound like slavery were career opportunities for the tens of the thousands of captured Africans dragged to America's shores, that all those long sweating days in the cotton fields and in the smith shops and in the rape cages were "work skills" they could put on their resumes when they go job hunting down the road.

Except in slavery there WAS no "down the road," no freedom to go find your own work, you were either worked to death on the plantation where they bought you from the auction blocks, or you were traded off to another plantation - oft-times without your family and loved ones - to pay off the debts of your overseers / masters and worked to death there.

The nation is littered with gravesites of tens of thousands of slaves who died in chains. Claiming all that work was a "BENEFIT" is an obscenity that should never be taught.

But that's what DeSantis and the other Far Right Republicans want to teach. They WANT future generations of White kids to grow up to the "comforting myth" that slavery was a benefit to the slaves, they WANT to convince Black kids that there was no difference between the horrors of antebellum chattel slavery and the current-day failures of fair treatment in education and workplaces.

This is the American Conservative gaslighting effort to set the stage, to twist the "debate" on slavery in their long-term goal to make it okay to bring back race-based slavery in some form. We've already seen - I have, as far back as 2010 - the Far Right push to undo their legacy of the 14th Amendment Citizenship clause so they can deny the rights of any class of people they want. How easy would it be for them to deny the constitutionality of the 13th Amendment and create the excuse of "slavery" as a "vocational skill program"?

This is a nightmare.

Betty Cracker at Balloon Juice is a fellow Floridian, and she's as angry about this whitewash as I am. She's livid that DeSantis and his GOP lackeys are trying to rewrite the horrors of Rosewood and Ocoee Massacres as "both siderisms": 

I think the Ocoee Massacre remains the most deadly election-related race massacre in U.S. history to this day. So how did black people perpetrate violence? At Ocoee, in self defense, a black man named July Perry shot and killed two members of the KKK lynch mob that had surrounded his house because a friend was thought to have taken refuge there after attempting to vote in Florida while black (Note: this was in 1920, the friend was a WWI veteran who had been told by a local judge he did qualify to vote even in that Jim Crow era). 

The mob eventually lynched Perry anyway, killed more than 30 other black people, burned their houses and businesses to the ground, and established Ocoee as an all-white “sundown town.” But it’s important to know that both sides acted violently and had violence perpetrated upon them (Note: Betty is being sarcastic, by the by).

In this instance, DeSantis has layered on plausible deniability by enlisting crackpot people of color to do the dirty work, including Florida Education Commissioner Manny Diaz, Jr. and the department’s African American history task force. Trump had to hand out “Blacks for Trump” shirts to white people. DeSantis is building a diverse coalition of right-wing cranks to whitewash black history and enact a far-right agenda...

DeSantis is doing all of this to win over Far Right Republicans on the national level as he campaigns for 2024, desperate to outdo the overt racism that trump spews by passing laws and breaking protocols that sinks to the deepest needs of the "deplorable" MAGA base. In the process, he's going against entire centuries' worth of facts, against the truth of how damaging human chattel slavery was - and still is - to all of humanity across the board.

Slavery has no benefit. None. Slavery not only brutalized the Black Americans who suffered under the chain and whip, slavery also turned White Americans into brutes, broken monsters who got drunk and violent on the power they wielded over other lives. Even the non-owning Whites both North and South in the pre-Civil War era profited from the physical and emotional damage that slavery caused, and it still created the "White Privilege" class system that skews our legal system and social norms to this day.

For all the problems we have today, trying to forge a stronger system of justice and equality, the modern Republican Party is trying to revert our nation's long arc of history back to the 1850s. They WANT us to accept slavery, they WANT us to dehumanize the Black (and in the process the Latino and Asians who are "foreigners" to the eyes of the White Man, and then the Woman whose rights back in those days were just as non-existent) to where they have no rights at all.

Goddamn them, Goddamn DeSantis for shoving down our throats his political agenda of lies and deceit and race-driven fear.

Hey, Republicans: If Slavery was so great at teaching "work skills," why didn't they offer those "work skills" to the poor Whites who wanted to get ahead in their career paths? Hmm? Anyone of Anglo-Euro origins willing to put a collar on their neck and chains on their wrists to work 12 straight hours in the fields? Anyone?

For the LOVE OF GOD, Humanity, stop voting Republican.

Friday, July 21, 2023

The Age of Barbieheimer

Okay, with all the chaos going on in the political world, are we the United States ready as a nation to handle a cultural moment like having two movies not compete but complement and co-exist with each other?

Because we're at that moment July 21 2023 where the Hollywood tradition of "counterprogramming" - where a movie release of obvious blockbuster proportions makes it difficult to release other films, except  giving a smaller sometimes more artistic movie a chance to attract audiences that are not attuned to that blockbuster - offered us the movie Barbie - a comedic, lighthearted, brightly colored goofball type of movie based on "Intellectual Property" (IP) bringing in an established and fervent fanbase designed solely to entertain and make $500 million at the box office - versus Oppenheimer - a dramatic, darkly lit serious biographical epic focusing on the man most responsible for the atomic bomb and the world-shattering implications of such a weapon, and designed to be Oscar Awards bait - to be the highlights of a movie summer season.

Except something weird happened. The movie-going fanbases got into the "counterprogramming" effort - we are now as a species in a kind of post-modern awareness of tropes - and started complementing each other's films to where a contingent of filmgoers openly planned to watch both films as a double-header.

The event got its own Wikipedia page: Barbieheimer. The meme of the year.

Via Rebecca Rubin at Variety:

At a glance, the audience overlap isn’t clear. “Oppenheimer,” starring Cillian Murphy, Robert Downey Jr. and Emily Blunt, is a somber character study about the theoretical physicist who led the development of the atomic bomb. “Barbie,” featuring Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling, is a neon-hued fantasy comedy about Barbie-Land expats who go on a quest for self-discovery in the real world. Visually, “Oppenheimer” is moody and intense, while “Barbie” is a physical manifestation of the color pink. Yet the contrast is the very thing that’s galvanizing film lovers.

“This could have been something dividing the masses, but instead it’s bringing everyone together,” says Nicole Boisseau, a 21-year-old Richmond, Va. student. Her dad, Jay Boisseau, who also has tickets to both films at Alamo Drafthouse on opening weekend, says that jokes aside, the mismatched scheduling works out for viewers. “Since they are so different, it’s not like you’re going to spend six hours watching the same thing,” he notes.

And as Rubin points out, as the fandoms got more into the idea of the double-feature, the situation got weirder as people noticed that the two films are going to be stunningly similar in archetypal ways:

But his daughter believes the movies have more in common than meets the eye. “They’re both questioning the nature of humanity.” (She’s serious. During one hilarious scene in the “Barbie” trailer, Margot Robbie’s life-size doll turns to her friends at a dance party to ask: “Do you guys ever think about dying?”)

That wham line from the trailer did indeed spark a new wave of discussions among the Barbie faithful, as more clues from other trailers and teasers pointed to that film sending their character on a Hero's Journey to find out what is wrong with herself (more specifically, what is wrong with the young girl that Barbie represents). The "something weird" got weirder... and more profound.

The audiences began realizing that instead of a cheap, fun, almost perfunctory piece of entertainment - like the animated Super Mario Bros movie released earlier this year that performed to box office expectations - they were getting a Barbie movie from a film auteur willing to explore the deeper ramifications of the doll's cultural impact since its introduction in 1959, alongside a bioepic film about the inventor of nuclear Armageddon from an equally imposing film auteur who knows how to stir emotional awe and enlightenment out of the darkness itself:

Some cinephiles believe it’s because the two filmmakers inspire a particular kind of loyalty in their fans. Nolan, who has delivered commercial winners like “The Dark Knight,” “Inception” and “Interstellar,” and Gerwig, the indie favorite behind “Lady Bird” and “Little Women,” are the rare directors who can draw audiences on their name alone.

“It comes down to the filmmakers, who are widely respected. They complement each other in a weird way,” says Meredith Loftus, 30, of Los Angeles. She compared the scheduling to an unusual double-header in 2008 of Nolan’s superhero epic “The Dark Knight” and the kitschy musical “Mamma Mia!,” which opened on the same day...

I'd discussed Nolan's Dark Knight before, when honoring Tiny Lister's passing, and how Nolan took an IP themed "product" - Batman - and crafted a noir-ish operatic epic that not only won the box office but wowed the film critics. I'd written elsewhere how The Dark Knight deserved Oscar love and yet got snubbed in such a way that the outrage reshaped the awards to accept more films for Best Picture (and opened the door for action thriller-type movies like Mad Max Fury Road to achieve the honor of getting nominated).

We're now facing a similar moment with Greta Gerwig taking an IP themed Barbie and turning it into an Oscar contender. Seriously, more than just the (deserved) Set Design and Costuming nods the film's likely to get (just the fact alone that the production used up every pink paint and dye on the planet should get the awards).

We're talking about a movie where the early reports about the plot - confronting the themes of Stepford Wives-ish suburban conformity, the gender roles that Barbie (and Ken) impart to the girls and boys who play with them (and reflect back onto themselves), the struggle between matriarchy and patriarchy as the fantasy of Barbies who can do everything - doctor, lawyer, President, mermaid - crash into the harsh real world where men are mostly in control and Barbies are treated as sex objects, even the fact that Barbie is an "Intellectual Property" of Mattel that the company (represented by Will Ferrell's CEO) insists on "keeping in a box" ("biting the hand" humor indeed) - that clearly makes the film more philosophical and wistful than a simple Product Placement movie is expected to be.

Anchoring all that are performances that fans are already expecting to be excellent. Margot Robbie arguably was born to play Barbie her whole life - naturally blond, dancer's legs, the slim body that the Barbie doll is (in)famous for - but with an expressive face that can convey incredible gravitas (and she's been Oscar nominated before, so unless Meryl Streep and Helen Mirren and Natalie Portman and Jennifer Lawrence and Angela Bassett all come out with jaw-dropping lead actress roles this autumn, Robbie should get her due). Ryan Gosling - he of the Photoshopped washboard abs - is also getting critical acclaim for his role as Ken, the "boyfriend" that culturally has been reduced to just another accessory for Barbie but whose exposure to the real-world "Alpha Male" movement threatens the stability of the fantasy Barbieland back home (Gosling has also received Oscar nominations before, so as long as Leo DeCaprio and Jamie Foxx and Timothee Chalamet and Andrew Garfield and Denzel Washington and Tom Hanks don't come out with serious lead actor roles this autumn, Gosling should get his due).

In the face of all that, the expectations for Oppenheimer are lower in terms of box office but higher in terms of critical acclaim: There is already Oscar talk for actor Cillian Murphy, and Nolan is bound to get another shot at Best Director. Given the A-list talent - Matt Damon, Robert Downey Jr, Emily Blunt, Kenneth Branagh, Florence Pugh, Rami Malek - on-board other acting nominations are likely, and a lot of technical award nominations as well.

There's not much spoilers to what the audiences will know about the plot: We all know what happened July 16th 1945 when the Trinity Bomb test took place and the Atomic Age was no longer a product of Science Fiction. We all know there were serious debates among the physicists, military leaders, and politicians about the ramifications of weaponizing the atom. And we all endured the decades of Duck And Cover, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Doomsday Clock, Mutually Assured Destruction, "Shall We Play A Game?", and the post-Cold War nightmare of rogue nations carrying suitcase bombs.

Like all the other epic biographical films of before - Lawrence of Arabia, Gandhi, Weird: The Weird Al Story - Oppenheimer tries to delve into the background and motivations of a real-world figure whose personal life is still not well-known or understood. The general awareness is of a scientist who pushed during the Second World War for the creation of nuclear weapons before Nazi Germany could unleash them first, only to realize the dangers he himself brought to the world and later tried to atone for the damage he'd caused.

The best we remember Oppenheimer is his famous quote about what he thought when he saw the first nuclear mushroom cloud

We knew the world would not be the same. A few people laughed, a few people cried. Most people were silent. I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita; Vishnu is trying to persuade the Prince that he should do his duty, and to impress him, takes on his multi-armed form and says, 'Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.'

From all this, director Nolan is clearly creating a serious, almost bleak film that is going to be more adult, more frank about the human condition than Barbie ever could be. And yet, Nolan has a visual style - a desire to make things as realistic as possible, and yet as stunning as possible - that will also clearly dazzle the eye and leave audiences gasping. Look to his earlier stand-alone works like Inception or Interstellar: While based on Science Fiction/Fantasy, the visuals and technology on display were grounded in realism to where audiences could believe such things were possible. One of the fun facts of Interstellar was how Nolan's push to computer-generate an actual black hole (singularity) led to scientists discovering - and proving - previously unknown traits that black holes exhibit in real life. 

The fact that Nolan is claiming his film contains no CGI - no computer animation to enhance images, implying he's somehow mocked-up a nuclear explosion using practical effects - is going to be a major draw for people wondering how he pulled that off.

And in this telling, Nolan is likely going to use the similar Hero's Journey framework - detailing Oppenheimer's path from a student of nuclear physics to Destroyer Of Worlds - that Barbie will follow, creating a compare-and-contrast of two major figures that affected the entire post-war world of the last-half of the 20th Century.

It's no wonder Barbieheimer (or Barbienheimer?) is a thing.





This will be a day long remembered by the geekdom:


The only remaining argument is "Which order to see both movies?" If you go see Barbie first, you want to get the frivolity and fun out of the way before dealing with the nuclear nightmares that Oppenheimer elicits, and coming to terms with death in a sober manner. If you see Oppenheimer first, it means you want to wrap up the day/evening with the floating party that is the Barbie life by seeing the movies and then dance the hidden pains away.

Go to it, America.

Today is the day.

Now I am become Death, the Destroyer of Barbie Worlds...

Update 7/23/23: I survived Barbieheimer. I went to Barbie first at 11:15 AM and then Oppenheimer at 1:40 PM.


Wait, why was Barbie more expensive than Oppenheimer? Barbie was the first showing, isn't that usually a cheaper deal?!

Saturday, July 08, 2023

Taking a Break from Blogging July 2023 Version

I need to take a brief hiatus - again - from blogging to focus on writing a bigger project this month.

I need the well wishes, please and thanks. 

Here is a video of Mal hitting me with his tail.



Thursday, July 06, 2023

Planning Our Escape from Twitter to... Where?

Well, after six months of insane mismanagement by Elon Musk, this past weekend of enforcing data limits on viewing is pretty much the death knell of Twitter. It's now a question how quickly this ship will sink into the Atlantic. Anne Laurie over at Balloon Juice has a number of details - especially how Musk is failing to pay his bills - which would be better to read at her article before returning back here, please and thanks. Here's a GIF of Titanic failure to pass the time until you return.

via GIPHY

Ever since Musk overpaid for Twitter - seriously, 44 BILLION?! - he has fired most of his workforce, tried to cheat employment safety guidelines, sought to make Twitter users PAY for something that had been free for them for more than a decade, allowed haters and racists back in order to spike reader interest, and eventually committed to this act of self-immolation as if to drive even addicted Tweeters - sighs and points to mirror - to flee for their lives.

I mean, I know I promised to walk away from Twitter, and I tried... for about a week, before I got pulled back by the fact most people I know were still using it, and because it was still a quick and powerful way to gain near-instant news. A lot of people pledged to get off the ship back then, and yet... We were too used (too addicted) to the app.

But we're looking at the likely abandonment of Twitter within this month as more people get frustrated with Musk's growing incompetence at managing things. It does not help Musk that more alternatives to his app are cropping up.

I had for example jumped onto CounterSocial last November. Only because a favorite for everyone else - Mastadon - was too frustrating for me to install and set up. It wasn't intuitive or helpful. Sadly not a lot of people I knew crossed onto CS, there was no audience to share, so I hadn't kept up with it.

Soon after, an alternative called Spoutible showed up, and I was able to register onto that relatively easy. It mimics a lot of features on Twitter and it should be the easiest app to shift to, except not everybody has, partly because of early controversy with Spoutible's owner being a jerk and mostly because (see below)...

Another app called BlueSky showed up a couple months ago, promising to be the best possible replacement, and it's using the Beta testing process to encourage users to invite their friends in order to make BlueSky more desirable (for those of us who never sat at the cool kids' table, this is high school all over again sigh) to join. As Twitter collapsed this weekend, BlueSky invites skyrocketed (pun intended).

And just this Monday, Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook I mean Meta announced the speedup of a new app tied into the Facebook/Instagram services called Threads, which dropped this morning late Wednesday night and already got 30 million users to where Musk is threatening to sue Zuck out of spite. While shifting over to an app most people already have - Facebook has 2.99 billion users globally and Instagram which ties into Threads has 2.35 billion - would be a no-brainer, there are security and privacy concerns about the transition that makes me wary.

As you see, while Twitter is sinking, we humans are overwhelmed with choices we didn't have when Twitter started back in 2006. The instant sharing of tweets - faster than newswires and RSS feeds, easier to send to millions of readers than emails or texts - was a novel and unique software app for its day. But now that Musk is punching holes into his own luxury liner to make it sink faster, the survivors queuing for the lifeboats can't make a clean decision on which arriving cruise ship to join.

I mean, we could even go join up on Discord and tie-in to our multiplayer gaming habits, but that just breaks down to such specific cliques that general sharing could never be a reality. And hell, I am digressing here.

So, if you're keeping up at home:

Twitter: still there at https://twitter.com/PaulWartenberg playing the trumpet with the band until the ship sinks for good.

CounterSocial: Can be found at https://counter.social/@pwartenberg but I'm not sure how often I will show up, but send me a tell when you get there.

Spoutible: I'm at https://spoutible.com/PaulWartenberg and I am trying to make it a habit of cross-posting my blog flogs to increase traffic from there.

BlueSky: (I'm not one of the cool kids I'm not one of the cool kids I'm not one of the cool kids I'm not one of the cool kids I'm not one of the cool kids I'm not one of the cool kids I'm not one of the cool kids I'm not... /cries)

Threads: Nope, not unless they PAY me to do it.

And I'm curious, are there OTHER social apps out there playing for Twitter's market share...?

(Keeps playing Herb Alpert's "Rise" until the waters reach the deck)


"Gentlemen, it has been a priv---" (suddenly gets invite to BlueSky) "Every sucker for himself! I'm out of here!" (flees)

Update 7/21/23: Holy sh-t I DID get an invite to BlueSky. You can find me there as @paulwartenberg.bsky.social 


Tuesday, July 04, 2023

Four for the Fourth 2023: Going Forth Towards Justice

If you're a regular follower of this blog, you should notice by now I'm kind of chomping at the bit for the American legal system to pick up the pace and hold donald mf'ing trump accountable for all the crimes he's (allegedly) committed (at least the ones since 2015).

The current situation is that trump is facing:

This is all the criminal charges trump is facing. There's STILL the civil trial in New York set for this October led by the state attorney's office - which is dropping hints (WHY?!) they may delay their case so it won't interfere with the criminal ones - and another civil trial by E. Jean Carroll against trump based on when trump was in the presidency, which was separate from the already-resolved trial against the defamatory stuff trump said after he left office.

Part of me had been hoping that Smith was going to release the additional indictments on trump before the holiday, but I now realize he probably held off on it so that most Americans can enjoy the day off and not get distracted by the partisan noise that will certainly erupt the moment trump facing more criminal charges, especially the insurrection matter that should be resolved soon with any hope.

I admit, as I've said before, I am obsessed on this matter because it irks me at a personal level that a con artist and failed businessman like trump never answered for his behavior in any serious way. The bankruptcies and settled lawsuits that dot his landscape were evasions of that, and it all built up as trump lied and bluffed and stole his way into an office of power he never should have held.  From there, he committed serious crimes that threaten our national security, and so much of that is unforgiveable to me, and ought to be to all other Americans on this day of national celebration.

So that's me, waiting for all the good news to drop this month now that the 4th of July is closing up at sunset with light shows and fireworks (which we shouldn't use because it upsets our animals) and music and... Holy Shit is that Carlton hosting PBS's A Capitol Fourth?!

Happy 4th of July! And let justice be done!


Hark! A Review of Bruce Springsteen Albums

As appropriate for a Fourth of July "Four For the 4th" blogging effort, here's my look back at all of the Bruce Springsteen studio albums of the past 50 (!) years. Took me months to write this...


As I've mentioned earlier, I attended a Bruce Springsteen concert last February. As a long-time fan since the early 1980s - honestly before Born In the USA blew up - going to a show was one of those things you gotta do in life. Springsteen is legendary as a live artist, with marathon shows, crowd-sharing antics, emotional intensity that can overwhelm an arena (or even stadiums). Alas, over the years I 1) did not have the budget for it and 2) missed at the few times he toured when I could afford it due to work or calendar conflicts. This time around - facing the reality that Bruce is in his 70s and the odds of him touring will diminish - I planned feverishly to try and get tickets for his 2023 tour that just happened to start in my backyard of Tampa FL.

Goddamn Ticketmaster screwed me up when I tried to get the tickets though. I had to get bailed out by my brother Phil - also a big fan - who was able to scoop up the scalped tickets a month before the show. You do see him and my sister-in-law Karen in some of the photos I blogged gushing over the show.

Having done that, I felt I was overdue in going through the vast discography of Bruce - dating all the way back to 1972! - and so here I am, taking note of how THE BOSS rose from the mean streets of Freehold New Jersey to world domination in a career spanning more than 50 years.

Springsteen began like most rockers playing as a garage band, working his way up to gigs around the towns with fellow teenagers. Joining up with bands calling themselves the Castiles, and then later another group Steel Mill, Springsteen formed his own band and got the attention of Columbia Records around 1972. Coming in with the "Jersey Bar" sound mixed with expectations of being a folk-acoustic performer akin to Bob Dylan, Springsteen's early work impressed critics but didn't sell a lot of records. It would take the word-of-mouth regarding his live shows - overwhelming, epic nightly performances compared to religious experiences - to form his fanbase as his career improved into the late 1970s, especially as his third album "Born To Run" proved to be his home run hit.

Never as great a poet as Dylan, Springsteen's true strength proved to be storytelling, especially in the live shows where he would intermix tales of him growing up in both a turbulent era - Vietnam especially haunts him and his circle of friends - and a turbulent home with the songs that came from those experiences. 

In 1984, the unexpectedly huge response to Born In The USA catapulted him to uber-celebrity status to where "The Boss" became the cornerstone of classic American rock-n-roll. While Springsteen's fame ebbed during the 1990s, he maintained a schedule of new releases (and re-issues of older material to explore his outtakes and musical pathways) to keep himself at the top of the game.

It would take forever for me to rank all these studio albums - although some are clearly my favorites and several are "What the hell were you thinking, Bruce?" - so a chronological retrospective is more in order. There is much like the Beatles an evolution to Springsteen's musical history, shifting from mood to mood and band line-up to solo works. In some respects, Springsteen chronicles the ebb and flow of American history - the angst he felt as part of the Vietnam generation, witnessing the fall of union labor and rise of economic turmoil in his New Jersey communities, the horrors of 9/11, and the insights of growing up and growing old - from the turbulent 1960s onward.

Title: Greetings from Ashbury Park NJ (1973)

Importance: As his debut album, Springsteen was expected to make his impact on the early 1970s music scene, which at the time was dominated by blues or acoustic folk acts filling the void left by the Beatles breaking up. The company wanted a full acoustic album of just Bruce on guitar, but Bruce included his band on most recordings, and there got to be a fight over it. The album ended up being a mix of both, with Springsteen writing and mixing with limited help "Spirit In the Night" and "Blinded By the Light" to appease a studio exec who felt there were no singles in the original playlist.

The critics loved it, but for myself the album is (still, years later) too raw. Where some bands jump out with a hot first album, this one sounds and feels like a rookie effort from someone who hadn't figured it out yet. Lyrics - trying hard to tell stories instead of setting mood - didn't always keep to the rhythm of the songs. Lacking the confidence, poise, or emotional maturity that would show up later. Even the later live performances of these songs are improvements to these early efforts.

It doesn't hurt to listen to "Greetings" to get an idea where Springsteen started from, but don't expect to get blown away by this. (And Manfred Mann did a better version of "Blinded By the Light")

Epic Song(s): None
Great Song(s): Growin Up, Spirit In the Night, It's Hard To Be a Saint In the City
Good Song(s): Does This Bus Stop at 82nd Street, For You


Title: The Wild, The Innocent, and the E Street Shuffle (1973)

Importance: This is where following Bruce as he evolved from album to album helps. You can hear the improvement in melody and meshing the rhythm to the lyrics compared to "Greetings."

No longer expected to be an acoustic solo act, Springsteen was able to bring in a full band now going by the E Street moniker, especially saxophonist Clarence Clemons, organist Danny Federici, and bassist Garry Tallent (all major members of the band for much of its history). Along with drummer Vini Lopez and pianist David Sancious, they filled out the blues (with a bit of funk rolled in) band lineup that would make the Jersey Bar sound work for Springsteen's style. With this sound Springsteen's confidence grew, especially as he took this on tour where the E Street performances wowed audiences coast to coast. The song "Rosalita" while not a big single release became Springsteen's signature song on stage.

If I encourage anyone to listen to Springsteen, I would tell them to start with THIS album first.

Epic Song(s): Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)
Great Song(s): The E Street Shuffle, 4th of July Ashbury Park (Sandy), Kitty's Back, Incident on 57th Street
Good Song(s): none (New York City Serenade is too freaking long, and Wild Billy's Circus Story too weird)


Title: Born to Run (1975)

Importance: By this point, due to low sales of the first two albums, Bruce was facing a make-or-break. The critics loved him, the live crowds adored him, but the record-buying markets did not. Willing to shift to a new sound, aiming for the Phil Spector "Wall of Sound" style to make his music more radio-friendly, Springsteen worked on lyrics more profound and on music more operatic (even as he cut back on the playtime of most songs to fit within the 5-minute clock that radio stations prefer songs fit into). He brought in new help - music critic Jon Landau who became a fan of Bruce during his big tour ("I have seen the future...") - and filled out the E Street Band with old friends (Steven Van Zandt especially) he could trust.

The end result was a more packed, coherent album that played like a self-contained rock opera (although the songs themselves did not relate to each other). Although he attempted to downplay the New Jersey narratives that reflected his first two albums, this one still spoke - especially "Born to Run" and "Jungleland" - to the experiences of growing up in (and growing out of) the Garden State.

Born To Run turned out to be not just Bruce's breakout hit, it proved to be one of the greatest albums of all time. His romantic lyrics finally reached a confidence that matched the best poetry out there (without having to delve into the symbolism that Dylan would). I had "Thunder Road" taught to me in a college class by a professor who was wowed by Bruce's word choice and narrative skill. Most of the songs are radio staples to this day, and several - including the band's autobiographical song "Tenth Avenue Freeze Out" - are concert favorites well into 2023 (I can vouch for that). 

If there's anything jarring in my mind it's "Meeting Across the River," a spoken-word tale in the style of 1940s crooners (think Frank Sinatra) that works better as a short story than a lyric. But it still foreshadows a lot of the darkness and desperation that would appear in Springsteen's later works (hint Nebraska hint).

There are no serious misses on this album. This is why I compared it earlier to epic albums like Joshua Tree, Nevermind, and Revolver (or Rubber Soul, or Abbey Road, or...)

Epic Song(s): Thunder Road, Tenth Avenue Freeze Out, Born to Run, She's the One, Jungleland
Great Song(s): Night, Backstreets
Good Song(s): Meeting Across the River


Title: Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978)

Importance: After the epic high of Born To Run came this mood twister of an album. Reflecting Springsteen's sour mood after a prolonged legal battle with his previous album producer, and reflecting the national mood as the 1970s saw economic decline across the blue-collar places that Springsteen felt connections to, Bruce and his bandmates crafted enough songs during this period to fill at least four albums' worth of music (which would show up later in re-release albums dedicated to the outtakes like The Promise).

Eschewing the "Wall of Sound" production style, this album goes with a more punk mentality even as the orchestral band sound powers through. The lyrics take on darker themes (hence the album title and main song anchoring the whole thing) to where Bruce is questioning just what America really means.

For myself, I put this album ahead of Born To Run in terms of artistic and lyrical quality. When I had a poetry collection assignment for a creative writing class in high school, this was the album I listened to and inspired me to write each poem for that assignment (I got a good grade, might have been an A). My mom saved the typed pages, I hope I've still got them in storage somewhere...

Epic Song(s): Badlands, Candy's Room, The Promised Land, Prove It All Night, Darkness on the Edge of Town
Great Song(s): Something In the Night, Streets of Fire
Good Song(s): Racing In the Streets


Title: The River (1980)

Importance: Every artist seems to want a double-album release somewhere in their career, so Bruce decided at this point to drop this massive opus on America just as the national mood shifted from the miasma of 1970s to the (false) sunlight of a Reagan dystopia. Either that or Bruce's experience of weeding down from his previous album Darkness (some of those outtakes survived onto this album) convinced him he might as well release most of what he and the E Street Band did just to get it out there (there WAS an early version of this called The Ties That Bind as a single album, but Bruce rejected that and recorded even more songs to make The River).

Where Bruce claimed Born To Run was an album based on the American experience, this album truly was: Running on themes of families drifting away, hopes dashed, relationships failing, and a sense that everything the Boomer generation grew up to disappearing into scrapbooks and faded memories. There were frivolous rockers like "Out In the Street," "Cadillac Ranch," and "I'm A Rocker" on here, but dominating this album were cynical, heartfelt songs like "Hungry Heart" and "Point Blank" and other, slower tunes that echoed the melancholy of Darkness.

Like most double-albums, fans can argue about what songs shouldn't have been included to reduce the album to a more manageable single release. For myself, the final quarter of this - on vinyl, it'd have been Side Four, on CD it's the second half of Disc Two - were slow, painful listens and I haven't been a fan of those songs. However, I am a huge fan of "Point Blank" which has a similar slow and mournful style but yet carried more powerful lyrics and emotional heft as Bruce performs it. I woke up one morning to "Point Blank" playing on the radio, and I lay in bed listening to it and I swear it played for like 12 minutes and I felt every second of it.

Bit of trivia: Bruce wrote the song "Hungry Heart" for the punk band Ramones, but Landau talked him into keeping it for himself. It turned into Springsteen's first Top Ten hit song. What would the music world be like if the Ramones had gotten that song and it took them to the Top Ten?

Epic Song(s): Hungry Heart, Out In the Street, Point Blank
Great Song(s): The Ties That Bind, Two Hearts, You Can Look (But Better Not Touch), Cadillac Ranch, I'm a Rocker
Good Song(s): Sherry Darling, The River, Fade Away


Title: Nebraska (1982)

Importance: All of the darkness and cynicism creeping into Springsteen's early work reaches an epic apex with this album, arguably a solo work with sparse inclusions of other E Street band members. "Sparse" is a good word for this album, as it tears down the American Dream and shakes loose a lot of the nightmares haunting the nation as crime and despair followed the collapse of blue-collar communities Bruce called home.

The recording history for this album took on legendary status: Springsteen recorded a bunch of new songs onto a single recorder, planning to have the E Street re-do them into more rounded rock-n-roll numbers similar to Darkness and River. Thing was, when they did record the "electric" version of most of those songs, Bruce realized the original solo takes were the better versions and decided to release a cleaned-up set of songs from that. Several of the songs recorded from this period would end up as full E Street songs on Born In the USA, meaning there are at least nine known unreleased songs as well as the full-band versions of several of these songs in the vault that fans would love to hear some day. 

I should note Bruce and the E Streeters perform a hard-rock version of "Johnny 99" which they did at the 2023 Tampa show, but compared to the original sparse version, I gotta go with the sparse. An up-tempo song about a guy wanting to be on death row just isn't a toe-tapper. Otherwise, drummer Max Weinberg is on record claiming the "Electric Nebraska" kills it (yes, pun intended).

"Killing It" is the most common theme across this album, as most songs deal with a major character committing murder and the emotional fallout haunting them to each song's end. Even "Atlantic City" opens with one of the most iconic lines in music "Well they blew up the Chicken Man In Philly last night/And they blew up his house too..." which gives mafioso Phil Testa one of the most memetic deaths outside of Goodfellas.

In terms of repeat listens, this is a hard album to start and finish. Ever see the film Requiem For a Dream? This is similar: You can listen to it once and appreciate the artistic talent that went into it, but it's not exactly something you play at pool parties and family reunions. The only up-tempo song on here is "Open All Night" and it's a personal favorite of mine (this one song also helped with that poetry assignment I mentioned earlier) but past that it's all moody stuff similar to "Point Blank". Some of these songs - especially "Atlantic City," "Johnny 99," and "Highway Patrolman" - are vital parts of the Springsteen oeuvre, so this is still a must-hear album.

Epic Song(s): Atlantic City, Johnny 99, Highway Patrolman, Open All Night
Great Song(s): State Trooper, Reason To Believe
Good Song(s): Mansion On the Hill


Title: Born In the USA (1984)

Importance: Where Born to Run was a major seller and arguably a magnum opus, Born In the USA was a major blockbuster... and arguably Springsteen's most misunderstood and overhyped album ever.

Coming at a time when the music industry got into popular music - with a set rhythm and polished production (oft-times overproduced) that balanced between funk/dance and arena rock-n-roll - as well as rushing into videos as marketing with the stateside explosion of MTV, BitU became the focus of a mass media campaign playing up to the themes of Americana that Springsteen had been working with the past few albums. Intentionally recorded as a rocking album to counter the starkness of Nebraska, the power of the E Street Band's musical style attracted audiences attuned to the beats and the swagger, which ironically distracted from the rather negative dark lyrics Springsteen used to highlight his ongoing concerns about the decline of the blue-collar middle class. As a result, the album gained a notoriety for appealing to more conservative audiences who failed to pay attention to the lyrics that were railing against them.

The perfect example is the title song itself "Born in the USA," written from the viewpoint of a struggling Vietnam vet unable to find work, unable to cope with the friends he lost in the war, and doomed to live in the "shadow of the penitentiary" implying he was now a career criminal. Problem is, Bruce's passionate screaming of the chorus part "I WAS... BOORRRRRNNNN IN THE USAAAA!" made listeners think it was a song about rah-rah Patriotism. President Reagan himself tried to incorporate the song for his 1984 re-election campaigns. Springsteen came to openly regret he ever made the song into a rock-n-roll hit.

A lot of Boss fans believe this image
is symbolic of Bruce taking a piss - look at how he's standing -
on the American flag, a direct rebuke of the
rah-rah patriotism that Bruce saw during Vietnam
and the Reagan years.

Controversy aside, this album is one of Bruce's major works, an effective mix of moody ballads, odes to nostalgia, and straight up rockers. If you ignore the hype and actually listen to the lyrics, that is.

Epic Song(s): Born In the USA, Downbound Train, No Surrender, Glory Days
Great Song(s): Darlington County, I'm On Fire, Bobby Jean, My Hometown
Good Song(s): I'm Going Down, Dancing In the Dark


Title: Tunnel of Love (1987)

Importance: Coming off of the media high of the Born In the USA period, and also coping with the complexity of his own personal life going through the wringer, this album defied the expectations the media had of Bruce sticking to the manufactured flag-waving that had made him an 80s superstar.

Having wed an actress/model Julianne Phillips in 1985 - almost under societal pressure to do so - that marriage quickly soured, which reflected on this album's entire theme of the highs and lows of relationships.

Technically not an E Street album, as the band members only appeared in several songs throughout, but also not a straight solo album like Nebraska, this work seems to take a middle approach. Even with the backing band helping the music be more radio-friendly, this becomes arguably Springsteen's most personal album speaking from his own soul about the turmoil he needed to resolve.

In my opinion, this may be Springsteen's greatest work. The lyrics are at the level of sheer poetry, the music matching the mood on nearly every song, and the entire album fitting its themes about love and loss in ways few other albums by other artists ever achieved (Fleetwood Mac's Rumours arguably the only work to exceed this one). "Brilliant Disguise," an incredible gut-wrencher of a song about the pain of falling out with someone you thought you knew, is in my humble opinion the greatest song Bruce ever wrote.  

Epic Song(s): Tougher Than The Rest, Spare Parts, Tunnel of Love, Brilliant Disguise
Great Song(s): Ain't Got You, All That Heaven Will Allow, Two Faces, One Step Up, Valentine's Day
Good Song(s): Cautious Man, When You're Alone


Title: Human Touch (1992) 

Importance: With the 1980s in the rearview mirror, Springsteen made the decision to reinvent himself as a different kind of rocker. He made the announcement that he would perform with a brand-new backing band (he didn't exactly say outright that the E Street Band was finished, but yeah) and set to work on two albums to be released simultaneously (there was a brief fad by artists like Guns n Roses to release two separate single LPs instead of releasing a double album, as though giving fans a choice to buy one or the other).

The resultant releases - at least here with Human Touch, not as much with Lucky Town - was a more pop-oriented sound than even Born in the USA. It was as though Bruce decided "Okay, let's make an album for an arena rock tour." However...

Both these albums had the misfortune of coming out just as Nirvana and the Grunge movement reset the rock music scene in the opposite direction Bruce was heading. The pop mentality underscoring Bruce's work on this album failed to appeal to general audiences, and worse alienated die-hard Springsteen fans more attuned to a rawer, bar-band sound. Some of the songs on this album have held up over the years, such as the title track, "Roll of the Dice," and "Real World," but others like "57 Channels" - Bruce's hoped-for pop hit that preached in all the wrong ways - were painful mistakes. The other album release at least walked away with a slightly better reputation.

Epic Song(s): Human Touch, Roll of the Dice
Great Song(s): Gloria's Way, Real World
Good Song(s): Soul Driver, All Or Nothing At All


Title: Lucky Town (1992)

Importance: Released in sync with Human Touch, Lucky Town had the impression of being the more blues-oriented sound of the two. Where Human Touch focused on more pop-flavored tunes, this album appealed to the sounds Springsteen relied on in his earlier albums. Problems again were that the over-produced feel to the songs hurt some of the tunes that could have been better off with more rawness. Still, of the two, Lucky Town is more enjoyable work all these years later. Like the debates fans have about double albums over what could get pared down to a more pleasing single album, I would argue Bruce was better off taking the best songs here and the best songs on Human Touch and just releasing that as one (better) album.

Epic Song(s): Better Days, Big Muddy
Great Song(s): Lucky Town, Living Proof
Good Song(s): Local Hero, If I Should Fall Behind, My Beautiful Reward


Title: The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995)

Importance: Either reeling from the backlash of the previous albums' poor reception, or else getting into the groove of bouncing between band-backed studio albums followed by toned-down acoustic solo works, this album had Springsteen returning to his meditations on the decline of the American middle class and the cynicism of a political culture that punishes the poor.

Essentially the spiritual successor to Nebraska, but done with a more somber and slow take and with more country influence than folk, one of the problems with this album was how bleak it got compared to everything else Springsteen had done before. Not helping matters was a dip in the sound quality: Half of everything Bruce sang was whispered or muffled, making this a nearly incomprehensible work. Coming at a time when my other music faves U2 and Van Halen were releasing miscues of their own, this was an album I just couldn't get into and kind of soured me on music for the rest of the 1990s.

Re-listening to it now for this review, I can be more forgiving now than how I first received this album, but it's still more bleak than what I like to hear. Makes me wonder what an "electric" version of this album would sound like.

Epic Song(s): Ghost of Tom Joad
Great Song(s): Straight Time
Good Song(s): Youngstown, The New Timer, Galveston Bay, My Best Was Never Good Enough


Title: The Rising (2002)

Importance: The release date matters. THIS was the album Bruce released in the wake of 9/11. 

Responding to the emotional trauma of the entire nation, Springsteen crafted songs and odes to those who had fallen that day and for the families they had left behind. Echoing the beliefs he's shown about American life throughout his early period - much like Darkness but without the bitterness - this was Bruce's - and the reunited E Street Band's - return to form.

Anchored by the title track "The Rising," which was less an anthem - not at all like "Born in the USA" - but more a hymnal, a religious memorial to those who died on 9/11. The closing chorus of Bruce describing the images of family and loved ones while another voice echoes "A Dream of Life" is the most haunting thing I've ever heard, and automatically triggers a crying fit even thinking about those lines. Excuse me (wipes the tears away). It's a song you need to sing (not listen, you will feel yourself driven to sing along) in cathedrals, and when performed live - trust me, I witnessed it first hand this February - it's a straight-up religious experience.

This wasn't an album written in anger. It was an attempt at coming to terms with the grief.

Epic Song(s): Lonesome Day, The Rising 
Great Song(s): Waiting on a Sunny Day, Further On Up the Road
Good Song(s): Counting on a Miracle, My City In Ruins


Title: Devils & Dust (2005) 

Importance: Following the pattern of an acoustic album after a band album, Springsteen culled together songs he'd been working on for a decade or more and issued this to critical acclaim. On this, he played more to the style of Dylan instead of Pete Seeger (which had been more noticeable influences on Nebraska and Tom Joad), which gives some of the songs more of a rock n roll edge than before. It's still in the purview of Darker and Edgier that makes this album hard to sit through in a good mood.

Epic Song(s): Devils & Dust, Long Time Comin
Great Song(s): All the Way Home, Maria's Bed
Good Song(s): Jesus Was an Only Son, The Hitter


Title: Magic (2007)

Importance: Getting back into the groove of reuniting with the E Street Band (AGAIN), Springsteen also got back into the habit of writing about the struggles of Middle America, this time with a bittersweet nostalgia as Bruce is clearly going through middle age. Both the quagmire of the Iraqi/Afghani wars - which had to trigger Bruce's memories of what Vietnam did to his friends - and the early onset of the Great Recession added to the underlying despair.

Among the darker elements of this album were several of Springsteen's brighter musical efforts, with "Girls In Their Summer Clothes" mirroring the romantic early works like "Rosalita", except with the melancholy of an older man wondering why those girls "passed me by." It was a song that deserved a little more radio love at the time, and it's arguably one of his later works that equals the best albums from his peak. 

The way I don't see much talk about this album, I get the feeling this was a very underrated effort and people need to reconsider its place in the Springsteen pantheon.

Epic Song(s): You'll Be Coming Down, Gypsy Biker, Girls In Their Summer Clothes
Great Song(s): Radio Nowhere, Livin' in the Future, Long Walk Home
Good Song(s): Last to Die, Terry's Song


Title: Working On a Dream (2009)

Importance: What Steven Van Zandt called the last of a trilogy of albums - starting with The Rising and seconded by Magic - covering the mood Springsteen had regarding the decade scarred by 9/11, bad wars, economic malaise, and questionable Star Wars prequels. Going in hard with a big rock-n-roll sound with the E Street backing him up, Springsteen attempted to create a grand musical experience on this work, only to have a lot of miscues and questionable decisions muck things up. This was the first album post-Born to Run I didn't fully like, and a recent re-listening for this review still didn't win me over. 

This was also the album that band member Dan Federici recorded on before passing in 2008. This is the point where time is catching up to the band, and the future albums were going to reflect that.

Epic Song(s): Lucky Day
Great Song(s): Working on a Dream, the Wrestler
Good Song(s): alas


Title: Wrecking Ball (2012)

Importance: Building up on the anger about the causes of the Great Recession that was still ongoing by this point, witnessing the passage of time affecting his New Jersey roots as well as coming to terms with more personal loss, this was the album Springsteen released to a new decade coping with the same old sorrows.

Not a full E Street effort but more rocking than his acoustic albums, this album shares more with Tunnel of Love in that regard, but it more closely resembles Magic in mood and effort. Anchored by the title track "Wrecking Ball" - an ode to the demolition of aging Meadowlands Stadium, where Springsteen played often on his tours - this is an album defined by defiance.

This is the album released after the death of "Big Man" Clarence Clemons himself (the album is dedicated to him). His power on the saxophone, a key element to the brass Jersey Bar sound that carries the band even after his passing, this was a loss that affected Bruce and the band in painful ways. 

Epic Song(s): Wrecking Ball
Great Song(s): Shackled and Drawn, Land of Hope and Dreams, We Are Alive
Good Song(s): Easy Money, You've Got It


Title: High Hopes (2014)

Importance: As part of the ongoing efforts by Springsteen to re-record, remix, and update many of the songs he's worked on since the 1970s - his backlog of unreleased material could fill a five-story library, and I might not even be exaggerating - Bruce often came out with releases like Tracks and The Promise to cover particular eras or productions like the Darkness sessions. This album was probably the first by my estimation where he added remixes of already-released songs performed in alternative ways as though rethinking his earlier decisions and looking for better acceptance.

As such, this is one of Bruce's more experimental albums, not artistic like Nebraska but exploring the range and feel of his existing music to see if he could find something fresh out of his older works. To my ears, not a lot of the songs worked out the way he hoped, but some of the choices - like turning "Ghost of Tom Joad" into a rock-n-roll number that would fit well into Magic and Wrecking Ball playlists - turned out as effective re-imagined efforts.

Epic Song(s): Just Like Fire Would 
Great Song(s): High Hopes, American Skin (41 Shots), Ghost of Tom Joad
Good Song(s): The Wall


Title: Western Stars (2019)

Importance: I tell no lie, I'm not a fan of country music. Southern rock, oft-times yes. And there are times in Springsteen's oeuvre where he crosses from Jersey Bar sound to Southern sound without missing a beat and going back again like he was merely visiting. When he goes acoustic most of his work echoes the folkways style of Seeger and Dylan, but some of those songs do carry a western flavor. This was the album where Bruce well full cowboy.

To be fair, Springsteen kept wanting to record albums that reflected the full American experience (like writing the Great American Novel) and so there had to be a lot of western-themed songs bouncing around in that head of his. Inspired by the California rock sounds of the 1970s like Glen Campbell and the Eagles - which carried a lot of country influence - Springsteen brought to it his own sense of nostalgia and bittersweet view of an America he missed from his youth.

For me, I dreaded getting this album worried it was going to be a sound I wasn't going to comprehend - much like watching U2 go disco on me with Pop - but this turned out to be a listenable effort, with decent songs that didn't sound any different from songs I've heard between Darkness through Wrecking Ball. At least Bruce got this out of his system. I think.

Epic Song(s): Sundown, Hello Sunshine
Great Song(s): Tuscon Train, Sleepy Joe's Cafe
Good Song(s): Hitch Hikin' 


Title: Letter to You (2020)

Importance: Coming relatively quickly after Western Stars, as though Springsteen wanted to get back to his rock roots with the E Street Band as soon as possible, Letter to You came out just as the world shut down over a pandemic. It seems almost fitting, as a lot of the songs on this album seem affected by all the personal losses Bruce was feeling echoing the similar losses a lot of people were going through (not just the deaths of loved ones, but the reality our lives were changing in ways that can't be undone).

A lot of the lyrics on this album come across as Bruce's most personal work since Tunnel of Love, and is near-equal to that album in terms of poetic impact. Songs like "Last Man Standing" - dedicated to Bruce's friend George Theiss who co-founded his first band the Castiles - covered themes like aging, and regret of a man reaching 70 and coming to terms that he's closer to his death - "coming for me like a freight train" - than to his birth.

Musically this is one of Springsteen's most melodic efforts, and arguably the best album he's done since the 1980s, placing this atop the great albums - Born to Run, Darkness, and Tunnel of Love - on his resume.

Epic Song(s): Letter to You, Last Man Standing, House of a Thousand Guitars, Ghosts 
Great Song(s): Burnin' Train, I'll See You In My Dreams
Good Song(s): Rainmaker 


Title: Working On a Dream (2022)

Importance: Interesting for a musician/songwriter like Springsteen, he's got so much of his own material to record you don't expect him to do a lot of covers of songs written/performed by others (Hell, he's given half the music industry his outtakes between 1977 through 1987). So it was a shock to witness Bruce release an album of nothing but covers. This is, by his own account, an attempt to "just sing" and perform the songs he felt did justice to the "great American songbook."

Focusing on R&B and soul songs from the 1960s through the 1980s, Bruce does his best to sing in that style, and on some of these songs he acquits himself well. It's just... well, I'm sorry, not every song deserved a cover version (the originals being way better no matter what Bruce tries to do). To me, the most egregious is his take on "Nightshift," a memorial song originally sung by the Commodores dedicated to Jackie Wilson and Marvin Gaye: where the Commodores was soulful as befitting an R&B group, Springsteen's attempt just sounded... wrong, overproduced, not at the right tempo. More of a rocker than an elegy. Bruce may love that song, but... I'm sorry, it was perfect the way it was.

This album does help us as a fanbase to see what influences Bruce when it comes to his own work. And some of the performances are good. It's just... was this trip really necessary?

Epic Song(s): Don't Play That Song
Great Song(s): Do I Love You (Yes I Do), Turn Back the Hands of Time, Any Other Way
Good Song(s): Soul Days, I Wish It Would Rain 


And that, kiddos, is the official studio albums he's done. Wanna go into some of the albums and packaged releases of importance to the Springsteen catalog? 'Cause there's MORE (oh Gods).

Maybe for the next tour. 

Four for the Fourth 2023: Second Thoughts About DeSantis' Flailing

So the Governor of Florida Ron DeSantis is running around, campaigning - rather badly at it - for the 2024 Republican nomination for the presidency, and his biggest message is "let's make America like Florida" selling his argument that he's turned the Sunshine State into a bastion of FREEDOM against "woke" librulism.

The thing is, DeSantis hasn't really done anything for freedom in Florida. He's supporting book bans and whitewashing of racism from our history books. He's cutting back on social services that could free rural families from poverty. DeSantis even went out of his way to use the line-item veto power to slash at budget items to punish fellow Republicans who refused to back him in his presidential campaign, not a very liberating thing to do.

But it's been two big political items that DeSantis committed that are coming back to hammer him. Above all, his harsh stance on immigration that drove him to push for and sign legislation attacking migrant workers and their employers. Digby has the current dirt on that:

It’s a super great idea to crack down on immigrant labor during a time of full employment and a building boom in a big agriculture state. So smart. And that’s what Ron DeSantis has done so that he can pretend he’s a tough hombre in a border state (which he isn’t.)

I should mention that's a sarcasm font. Digby then quotes from a recent Wall Street Journal report:

Florida’s agricultural and construction industries say they are experiencing a labor shortage because a new immigration law that took effect July 1 is leading migrant workers to leave the state.

The law, signed in May by Florida Gov. and GOP presidential candidate Ron DeSantis, seeks to further criminalize undocumented immigration in the state. It makes it a third-degree felony for unauthorized people to knowingly use a false identification to obtain employment. Businesses that knowingly employ unauthorized workers could have their licenses suspended, and those with 25 or more employees that repeatedly fail to use the E-Verify system to check their immigration status can face daily fines. 

Business owners and workers alike say the ranks of laborers in Florida have grown noticeably thinner.

“The employee who wants to work on the farm is not available anymore,” said Hitesh Kotecha, owner of a produce packaging facility in South Florida who leases land to farmers. “How are we going to run the farms?”

At downtown Miami’s construction sites, the story is the same: Workers have fled. Others are waiting to see what happens.

In Miami’s booming construction market, developers, construction companies and construction workers say the change happened as soon as DeSantis signed the legislation this spring. Workers at several construction sites in South Florida say a quarter to half of their teams are gone, exacerbating an already challenging labor shortage across the industry...

It's not just the employment:

In addition to increasing penalties on employers and workers, the new law requires hospitals that accept Medicaid to question a patient’s immigration status, and invalidates out-of-state driver’s licenses issued to people unauthorized to be in the U.S. It makes it a third-degree felony to knowingly transport into Florida a person who is undocumented and illegally entered the U.S. The law also adds $12 million to the amount of money the state has earmarked for its migrant-relocation program, bringing the total to $22 million this year. 

This is something that affects medical care, and people relocating to Florida for family/personal reasons. In the push to get at illegal immigrants who have fake IDs, we're going to see an increase in legal migrants having their IDs challenged and facing penalties for laws they're not breaking. This could even affect natural-born Latinos some of whom come from families that have been in the United States since before the goddamn siege at the Alamo. Wanna bet how quickly a Peruvian-American family at Universal Orlando or EPCOT visiting from Utah gets tossed into jail all because their dad's driver's license fails a "papers please" checkpoint on I-4?

It's a nightmare. There is no freedom here, only Republican cruelty.

And it's not just the Latinos suffering. White women are waking up to the reality that DeSantis just gutted their rights to alimony.

The way divorce works in the United States is messy, but alimony was a system that provided women coming out of a failed marriage some economic stability, based on the economic realities divorced women are more likely to fall into poverty after separation. Alimony can be a headache for the ex-husband, but it was a way to ensure women couldn't be forced by economic uncertainty to stay in a marriage that was broken (and likely violent/abusive).

What DeSantis passed ended "permanent alimony" and shifted the system to an adjustable format that uses a more complex and possibly confusing scaling system that undercuts any fiscal stability divorcing women could find. Here's some of the details (via NBCMiami news site):

Along with eliminating permanent alimony, the measure will set up a process for ex-spouses who make alimony payments to seek modifications to alimony agreements when they want to retire.

It will allow judges to reduce or terminate alimony, support or maintenance payments after considering a number of factors, such as “the age and health” of the person who makes payments; the customary retirement age of that person’s occupation; the "economic impact” a reduction in alimony would have on the recipient of the payments; and the “motivation for retirement and likelihood of returning to work” for the person making the payments.

The bill will set a five-year limit on what is known as rehabilitative alimony.

Under the plan, people married for less than three years will not be eligible for alimony payments, and those who have been married 20 years or longer will be eligible to receive payments for up to 75 percent of the term of the marriage.

The new law will also allow alimony payers to seek modifications if “a supportive relationship exists or has existed” involving their ex-spouses in the previous year. Critics argued the provision is vague and could apply to temporary roommates who help alimony recipients cover living expenses for short periods of time...

Everything I'm seeing so far becomes either a greater risk that women will lose alimony they were promised, to where they won't get any alimony at all.

For lower-income women, this merely ensures they will have no safety net should they try to escape a bad (violent) marriage. For upper-income women, this is going to ensure they are sliding down into lower-income status while their rich ex-husbands stay rich.

This is not going to bode well for women in Florida, who are already coping with the harsh anti-abortion laws DeSantis and the Florida GOP dumped on them. And it ought to horrify all the women across the United States where DeSantis is threatening to make America just like the hellhole he's making right now.

If there's any joy to be had, it's that for all of DeSantis' pandering on Far Right issues - to stake an early primary lead against donald trump - he has failed miserably. Everything DeSantis does in Florida isn't impressing the MAGA base voters that he needs to secure a primary win by June 2024. The way things are going, DeSantis could summon a special legislative session to pass laws giving MAGA voters everything they desire - Florida criminal charges against Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, criminalization of the Democratic party, mass arrests and deportation of everyone NOT White or Male or Obscenely Rich - and he'll still be losing to trump just sitting there whining about how unfair the world is towards himself.

It'd be tasty schadenfreude except for the reality that DeSantis is actively bullying, punishing, and harming Floridians all so he could prance on stage.

The quicker DeSantis loses the primaries and the quicker the federal courts undo half the damage DeSantis' laws are inflicting on us, the better.