Fellow non-threatening Negro comedian Wyatt Cenac has created this message from Barack Obama about the launch of his campaign. You can check Wyatt out over at his MySpace page.
Written and Starring Wyatt Cenac
Directed by David Guy Levy
Fellow non-threatening Negro comedian Wyatt Cenac has created this message from Barack Obama about the launch of his campaign. You can check Wyatt out over at his MySpace page.
Written and Starring Wyatt Cenac
Directed by David Guy Levy
The folks over at Rolling Stone have been publishing some damn fine political journalism recently. Their cover story on the worst congress ever should be required reading for every American. (As well as their list of the 10 worst congressmen.) They’re keeping up that tradition with the proclamation in the most recent issue that
The ideal candidate for the Democrats may be the man who won the popular vote in 2000 — and who opposed the war in Iraq from the very start.
Personally, I’ve been of this mindset since I saw An Inconvenient Truth. A Gore/Obama ticket would be a liberals wet dream for obvious reasons. But conservatives would be able to reconcile their vote with the fact that Gore was right all along on what may be the two most important issues facing Americans today. Global warming and the war in Iraq.
If you’re a Gore fancier, you might want to click on over to Hayden-Harnett and check out their Friends of Al Eco-Tote. It’s a pretty snazzy looking tote bag and they are donating $25 from each sale to global warming charities and $10 to American Forests to plant ten trees to help reduce carbon dioxide in our atmosphere. My wife just got hers and she’s pretty excited about it. She’s a little bag crazy though, so take that with a grain of salt.
In other Rolling Stone-related news, they’ve thrown their hat into the reality television ring with the show I’m From Rolling Stone. I don’t do too much MTV watching these days, but I hear it’s a pretty interesting show. The paper of record weighs in here.
For more of their political news, check out the National Affairs Daily.
You would think that, given his history, Ron Mexico would really be trying to keep his nose clean. As for Kwame Brown, that story has so many WTF moments in it, it seems to real to be true.
Vick surrenders water bottle
By CURT ANDERSON
MIAMI (AP) – Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick reluctantly surrendered a water bottle to security at Miami International Airport that smelled like marijuana and contained a substance in a hidden compartment.
Police said Thursday it could be weeks before a decision is made on whether to file charges. “We’ll do an analysis and see what it is. There’s no sense of urgency to it,” Detective Alvaro Zabaleta said Thursday.
The bottle was found to have a compartment that contained “a small amount of dark particulate and a pungent aroma closely associated with marijuana,” the police report said. The compartment was hidden by the bottle’s label so that it appeared to be a full bottle of water when held upright, police said.
Vick entered an airport concourse Wednesday morning with the 20-ounce bottle. His initial reluctance to turn over the bottle aroused suspicion among airport security screeners, a police report said. He eventually handed it over and boarded his flight to Atlanta.
Police said the bottle was sent to the Miami-Dade County crime lab.
Vick did not immediately return a phone call early Thursday.
“We plan to look into the matter and discuss it with Michael Vick before having any further comment,” Falcons spokesman Reggie Roberts said.
Under Florida law, possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana is a misdemeanour punishable by up to a year in prison and a US$1,000 fine. First offenders rarely do any jail time.
Two Transportation Security Administration screeners recognized the six-foot, 215-pound Vick.
Vick’s younger brother, Marcus, is a wide receiver for the Miami Dolphins. Michael Vick was the overall No. 1 draft pick in the 2001 NFL draft. In 2006, Michael Vick passed for more than 2,400 yards and also topped 1,000 yards rushing.
No charges against Brown for throwing cake
By Mike Bresnahan, Times Staff Writer
January 18, 2007
SAN ANTONIO — For the second time since his arrival in Los Angeles, Kwame Brown had a police report filed against him, this one involving a birthday cake.
The Lakers center was accused of ruining a $190 chocolate cake belonging to a birthday celebrant, Alexander Martinez, who was holding it outside a Hermosa Beach club early Saturday morning.
Brown was out with a group of teammates for Ronny Turiaf’s birthday, when he exited the club at about 2 a.m., grabbed the cake and threw it, hitting Martinez’s upper back, according to a police report. Brown then left in a limousine.
Turiaf said Wednesday that the cake was meant to hit him, which it did on the back of the head, but he declined further comment.
The Lakers had defeated the Orlando Magic at Staples Center a few hours before the incident.
Martinez, listed at 5 feet 9 and 165 pounds in the report, was out for a 30th birthday celebration with his wife and other friends. He filed his police report 12 hours later.
The district attorney declined to file charges against Brown, who was unavailable for comment and is not traveling with the Lakers on their three-game trip because he has been sidelined by a sprained ankle.
“It was a misunderstanding,” Lakers spokesman John Black said. “We’re glad that the authorities saw that it’s without merit. This can be put behind us and we can move on now.”
Before the cake toss, Martinez had asked for, and received, a photo with Turiaf outside a different club, according to the report.
After the incident, the accuser saw Lamar Odom exiting a nearby pizza place and told the Lakers forward what had happened.
One of Odom’s friends, described as a possible bodyguard in the report, pushed Martinez into the street and told him to “Get away from Lamar.”
Odom, however, told his friend to leave Martinez alone. “Calm down,” Odom said, according to the report. “He didn’t do anything.”
Odom also did not travel on the Lakers’ trip because of an injury.
Brown was accused of sexual assault by a college student last May in the middle of the Lakers’ first-round playoff series against Phoenix. Prosecutors declined to file charges because of insufficient evidence.
mike.bresnahan@latimes.com
I found this letter on Blake Leyh’s website. Blake is the music supervisor on the show, and he wrote this letter to address the many requests that he receives about the availability of the song, “The Fall” that plays over the end titles.
I’m not sure if I agree with his theory that releasing an mp3 of “The Fall” would hurt the possibility of a soundtrack, but I’ll definitely be the first in line to buy a copy if and when this comes to fruition.
Hello -
I have recently been swamped with requests for the end title music from The Wire,
the piece called “The Fall” which I wrote and performed and has been used on the show since season one. I am really happy to get all of this positive feedback and appreciation for the music, but unfortunately the volume of email regarding this has necessitated a mass reply, which you are reading now. Many, many people have sent me heartfelt, enthusiastic requests for a copy of the track, and I just can’t possibly respond to each person individually. I hope you understand!Here’s what’s going on with the music, and the status of The Wire soundtrack:
We tried very hard to get a soundtrack deal in place to release a CD in September 2006, timed to be available with the start of Season Four. But it just didn’t happen. As you probably know, we fans of The Wire are a very enthusiastic group, but we are also relatively few compared to the fan-base for other films and TV shows. At this time, no major label has seen fit to take a gamble on releasing The Wire soundtrack. Those of us involved with creating the musical component of the show have very high standards and we insist that any soundtrack reflect the broad scope and diversity of the music on the show. Some labels have shown interest in an “inspired by” soundtrack release, which would really be a way of using The Wire brand to promote something else. We aren’t interested in doing that.
We found out recently that HBO has approved a final fifth season of The Wire. It is a high priority for me and others to try again to make a soundtrack record which would be released along with Season Five. We can only hope and work hard to make it happen.
As far as “The Fall” goes, it has never been made available commercially anywhere. I own the rights to the track, and I am not releasing it at this time in any form, so that we can increase the value of a potential soundtrack release. If I made available an mp3 of that track, I feel that I would be hurting the chances of a soundtrack, and so I am holding on to the music for now.
If it ever becomes clear that there will be no soundtrack release for The Wire, I will definitely make “The Fall” available to everyone at that time.
Thanks for your continued support!
Best,
Blake Leyh
Music Supervisor, The Wire
October 2nd, 2006
She went from being the wife of a jazz legend to be a formidable figure in music history in her own right.

The Los Angles Times
OBITUARIES
Alice Coltrane, 69; performer, composer of jazz and New Age music; spiritual leader
By Jon Thurber, Times Staff Writer
January 14, 2007
Alice Coltrane, the jazz performer and composer who was inextricably linked with the adventurous musical improvisations of her late husband, legendary saxophonist John Coltrane, has died. She was 69.
Coltrane died Friday at West Hills Hospital and Medical Center in West Hills, according to an announcement from the family’s publicist. She had been in frail health for some time and died of respiratory failure.
Though known to many for her contributions to jazz and early New Age music, Coltrane, a convert to Hinduism, was also a significant spiritual leader and founded the Vedantic Center, a spiritual commune now located in Agoura Hills. A guru of growing repute, she also served as the swami of the San Fernando Valley’s first Hindu temple, in Chatsworth.
For much of the last nearly 40 years, she was also the keeper of her husband’s musical legacy, managing his archive and estate. Her husband, one of the pivotal figures in the history of jazz, died of liver disease July 17, 1967, at the age of 40.
A pianist and organist, Alice Coltrane was noted for her astral compositions and for bringing the harp onto the jazz bandstand. Her last performances came in the fall, when she participated in an abbreviated tour that included stops in New York and San Francisco, playing with her saxophonist son, Ravi.
She was born Alice McLeod in Detroit on Aug. 27, 1937, into a family with deep musical roots. Anna, her mother, sang and played piano in the Baptist church choir. Alice’s half brother Ernie Farrow was a bassist who played professionally with groups led by saxophonist Yusef Lateef and vibes player Terry Gibbs.
Alice began her musical education at age 7, learning classical piano. Her early musical career included performances in church groups as well as in top-flight jazz ensembles led by Lateef, guitarist Kenny Burrell and saxophonist Lucky Thompson.
After studying jazz piano briefly in Paris, she moved to New York and joined Gibbs’ quartet.
“As fascinating — and influential — as her later music was, it tended to obscure the fact that she had started out as a solid, bebop-oriented pianist,” critic Don Heckman told The Times on Saturday. “I remember hearing, and jamming with, her in the early ’60s at photographer W. Eugene Smith’s loft in Manhattan. At that time she played with a brisk, rhythmic style immediately reminiscent of Bud Powell.
“Like a few other people who’d heard her either at the loft or during her early ’60s gigs with Terry Gibbs, I kept hoping she’d take at least one more foray into the bebop style she played so well,” he said.
She met her future husband in 1963 while playing an engagement with Gibbs’ group at Birdland in New York City.
“He saw something in her that was beautiful,” Gibbs, who has often taken credit for introducing the two, told The Times on Saturday. “They were both very shy in a way. It was beautiful to see them fall in love.”
Gibbs called her “the nicest person I ever worked with. She was a real lady.”
She left Gibbs’ band to marry Coltrane and began performing with his band in the mid-1960s, replacing pianist McCoy Tyner. She developed a style noted for its power and freedom and played tour dates with Coltrane’s group in San Francisco, New York and Tokyo.
She would say her husband’s musical impact was enormous.
“John showed me how to play fully,” she told interviewer Pauline Rivelli and Robert Levin in comments published in “The Black Giants.”
“In other words, he’d teach me not to stay in one spot and play in one chord pattern. ‘Branch out, open up … play your instrument entirely.’ … John not only taught me how to explore, but to play thoroughly and completely.”
After his death, she devoted herself to raising their children. Musically, she continued to play within his creative vision, surrounding herself with such like-minded performers as saxophonists Pharoah Sanders and Joe Henderson.
Early albums under her name, including “A Monastic Trio,” and “Ptah the El Daoud,” were greeted with critical praise for her compositions and playing. “Ptah the El Daoud” featured her sweeping harp flourishes, a sound not commonly heard in jazz recordings. Her last recording, “Translinear Light,” came in 2004. It was her first jazz album in 26 years.
Through the 1970s, she continued to explore Eastern religions, traveling to India to study with Swami Satchidananda, the founder of the Integral Yoga Institute.
Upon her return she started a store-front ashram in San Francisco but soon moved it to Woodland Hills in 1975. Located in the Santa Monica Mountains since the early 1980s, the ashram is a 48-acre compound where devotees concentrate on prayer and meditation.
Known within her religious community by her Sanskrit name, Turiyasangitananda, Coltrane focused for much of the last 25 years on composing and recording devotional music such as Hindu chants, hymns and melodies for meditation. She also wrote books, including “Monumental Ethernal,” a kind of spiritual biography, and “Endless Wisdom,” which she once told a Times reporter contained hundreds of scriptures divinely revealed to her.
In 2001 she helped found the John Coltrane Foundation to encourage jazz performances and award scholarships to young musicians.
In addition to Ravi, she is survived by another son, Oren, who plays guitar and alto sax; a daughter, Michelle, who is a singer; and five grandchildren. Her son John Coltrane Jr. died in an automobile accident in 1982.
Like this:

US admits the war for hearts and minds in Iraq is now lost Pentagon
Neil Mackay Investigations Editor
THE Pentagon has admitted that the war on terror and the invasion and occupation of Iraq have increased support for al-Qaeda, made ordinary Muslims hate the US and caused a global backlash against America because of the “self-serving hypocrisy” of George W Bush’s administration over the Middle East.
The mea culpa is contained in a shockingly frank “strategic communications” report, written this autumn by the Defence Science Board for Pentagon supremo Donald Rumsfeld.
On “the war of ideas or the struggle for hearts and minds”, the report says, “American efforts have not only failed, they may also have achieved the opposite of what they intended”.
“American direct intervention in the Muslim world has paradoxically elevated the stature of, and support for, radical Islamists, while diminishing support for the United States to single digits in some Arab societies.”
Referring to the repeated mantra from the White House that those who oppose the US in the Middle East “hate our freedoms”, the report says:
“Muslims do not ‘hate our freedoms’, but rather, they hate our policies. The overwhelming majority voice their objections to what they see as one-sided support in favour of Israel and against Palestinian rights, and the long-standing, even increasing support, for what Muslims collectively see as tyrannies, most notably Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Pakistan and the Gulf states.
“Thus when American public diplomacy talks about bringing democracy to Islamic societies, this is seen as no more than self- serving hypocrisy. Moreover, saying that ‘freedom is the future of the Middle East’ is seen as patronising ? in the eyes of Muslims, the American occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq has not led to democracy there, but only more chaos and suffering.
US actions appear in contrast to be motivated by ulterior motives, and deliberately controlled in order to best serve American national interests at the expense of truly Muslim self- determination.”
The way America has handled itself since September 11 has played straight into the hands of al-Qaeda, the report adds. “American actions have elevated the authority of the jihadi insurgents and tended to ratify their legitimacy among Muslims.” The result is that al-Qaeda has gone from being a marginal movement to having support across the entire Muslim world.
“Muslims see Americans as strangely narcissistic, ” the report goes on, adding that to the Arab world the war is “no more than an extension of American domestic politics”.
The US has zero credibility among Muslims which means that “whatever Americans do and say only serves ? the enemy”.
The report says that the US is now engaged in a “global and generational struggle of ideas” which it is rapidly losing. In order to reverse the trend, the US must make “strategic communication” – which includes the dissemination of propaganda and the running of military psychological operations – an integral part of national security. The document says that “Presidential leadership” is needed in this “ideas war” and warns against “arrogance, opportunism and double standards”.
“We face a war on terrorism, ” the report says, “intensified conflict with Islam, and insurgency in Iraq. Worldwide anger and discontent are directed at America’s tarnished credibility and ways the US pursues its goals. There is a consensus that America’s power to persuade is in a state of crisis.” More than 90per cent of the populations of some Muslims countries, such as Saudi Arabia, are opposed to US policies.
“The war has increased mistrust of America in Europe, ” the report adds, “weakened support for the war on terrorism and undermined US credibility worldwide.” This, in turn, poses an increased threat to US national security.
America’s “image problem”, the report authors suggest, is “linked to perceptions of the US as arrogant, hypocritical and self- indulgent”. The White House “has paid little attention” to the problems.
The report calls for a huge boost in spending on propaganda efforts as war policies “will not succeed unless they are communicated to global domestic audiences in ways that are credible”.
American rhetoric which equates the war on terror as a cold-war- style battle against “totalitarian evil” is also slapped down by the report.
Muslims see what is happening as a “history-shaking movement of Islamic restoration ? a renewal of the Muslim world ?(which) has taken form through many variant movements, both moderate and militant, with many millions of adherents – of which radical fighters are only a small part”.
Rather than supporting tyranny, most Muslim want to overthrow tyrannical regimes like Saudi Arabia. “The US finds itself in the strategically awkward – and potentially dangerous – situation of being the long-standing prop and alliance partner of these authoritarian regimes. Without the US, these regimes could not survive, ” the report says.
“Thus the US has strongly taken sides in a desperate struggle ? US policies and actions are increasingly seen by the overwhelming majority of Muslims as a threat to the survival of Islam itself ? Americans have inserted themselves into this intra-Islamic struggle in ways that have made us an enemy to most Muslims.
“There is no yearning-tobe-liberated-by-the-US groundswell among Muslim societies ? The perception of intimate US support of tyrannies in the Muslim world is perhaps the critical vulnerability in American strategy. It strongly undercuts our message, while strongly promoting that of the enemy.”
The report says that, in terms of the “information war”, “at this moment it is the enemy that has the advantage”. The US propaganda drive has to focus on “separating the vast majority of non-violent Muslims from the radicalmilitant Islamist-Jihadist”.
According to the report, “the official take on the target audience [the Muslim world] has been gloriously simple” and divided the Middle East into “good” and “bad Muslims”.
“Americans are convinced that the US is a benevolent ’superpower’ that elevates values emphasising freedom ? deep down we assume that everyone should naturally support our policies. Yet the world of Islam – by overwhelming majorities at this time – sees things differently. Muslims see American policies as inimical to their values, American rhetoric about freedom and democracy as hypocritical and American actions as deeply threatening.
“In two years the jihadi message – that strongly attacks American values – is being accepted by more moderate and non-violent Muslims. This in turn implies that negative opinion of the US has not yet bottomed out Equally important, the report says, is “to renew European attitudes towards America” which have also been severely damaged since September 11, 2001. As “alQaeda constantly outflanks the US in the war of information”, American has to adopt more sophisticated propaganda techniques, such as targeting secularists in the Muslim world – including writers, artists and singers – and getting US private sector media and marketing professionals involved in disseminating messages to Muslims with a pro-US “brand”.
The Pentagon report also calls for the establishment of a national security adviser for strategic communications, and a massive boost in funding for the “information war” to boost US government TV and radio stations broadcasting in the Middle East.
The importance of the need to quickly establish a propaganda advantage is underscored by a document attached to the Pentagon report from Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy defence secretary, dated May.
It says: “Our military expeditions to Afghanistan and Iraq are unlikely to be the last such excursion in the global war on terrorism.”
Copyright 2005 SMG Sunday Newspapers Ltd.
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved.