Archive for February, 2007



11
Feb

Like The Wire? Remember 3rd Bass?

Then do I have a blog post for you!

I was such a big fan of The Cactus Album. I can’t believe that I never noticed this before. Click on the mp3 at the end of the post to see what I’m talking about.

You can’t talk about 3rd Bass without mentioning the classic video for “The Gas Face.” It features appearances by Doug E. Doug, Gilbert Gottfried, Flavor Flav, Prince Paul, EPMD and a young and slender MF Doom; then known as Zev Love X. Only in late 80s hip-hop could you have a Jewish guy with a high-top fade dropping science about institutionalized racism while doing the running man.

10
Feb

Bastards of the Party

The new HBO documentary by longtime Athens Park Blood Cle “Bone” Sloan has been getting tons of press and rave reviews. And it deserves every bit of praise that it has gotten. It was one of those films that I was eagerly anticipating and dreading at the same time. Sloan’s doc is an thoroughly researched investigation into the origins of the gang culture that grew to engulf huge chunks of Los Angeles.

The movie is frustrating, illuminating, and heart-wrenching. It’s also another example of why HBO is currently running circles around every other network on television.

The LA Weekly’s Ernest Hardy interviews Sloan in the most recent issue.

10
Feb

TV on the Radio-Wolf Like Me

Currently, the best damn band in the known universe. I can’t wait for March 30th.

06
Feb

John Edwards drops the ball on gay marriage.

After the Super Bowl, I was channel surfing and came upon C-Span’s Road to the White House coverage just in time to see John Edwards equivocating his ass off about gay marriage. He was addressing students at Dartmouth College when he was asked his stance on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender rights and gay marriage. Here’s the clip, followed by my response.

Right off the bat he starts talking about how he grew up in a Southern Baptist church in North Carolina and how, as a result of that, he feels morally conflicted about some of these issues. Guess what, John? That doesn’t matter. The Declaration of Independence is pretty clear about the fact that “all men are created equal.” That means that every single right that heterosexual people have, homosexual people are also entitled to. Period. End of story. I’m actually glad he chose to bring up religion. More on that in a moment.

Then he goes on to say that because of his beliefs he’s not for gay marriage. Who gives a damn what you’re for? As a United States Senator you take an oath of office which begins this way:

I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter: So help me God.

See, John. You made a promise to your God to defend the Constitution. The Constitution says gay people have the same rights as you. So, if you don’t defend the rights of homosexuals to get married, you’re going back on a promise that you made to God.

He goes on to mention that his daughter, who is 24 years old, thinks that this is ridiculous. She told him that this will disappear with her generation. I’ve often said the same thing about this issue. I firmly believe that one day in the not too distant future, we will look back at how we handled this and be profoundly ashamed. The problem is that the people of my generation and Cate Edwards’ generation aren’t in power. The people of John Edwards’ generation are. And every day that gay people in America are denied their basic civil rights is national embarrassment.

Then he starts talking about civil unions. Nothing pisses me off more than this. Any politician who utters the phrase civil unions or domestic partnerships will not get my vote. (You listening Obama?) It’s transparent, pandering bullshit. Politicians use this phrase so they won’t alienate the more conservative voters. Then they do exactly what Edwards did next which is talk about how he supports all anti-discrimination laws. Guess what John? You just admitted that you believe in discrimination. You either believe that gays have the EXACT SAME RIGHTS AS YOU DO or you don’t. There is no middle ground.

I love how at the end of the clip he says he’s not uncomfortable talking about it. Right. You’re a white Southern Baptist presidential candidate and you’re not uncomfortable talking about LGBT issues. That’s like me saying I’m not uncomfortable talking about my mother-in-law’s menopause.

It doesn’t matter how old you are. It doesn’t matter where you grew up. It doesn’t matter what your “internal conflict” is. You either defend their rights or you don’t. It’s sad that someone who has so many good things to say on so many issues ended up being such a coward on this one.

02
Feb

Introducing a new slang term: Abdul

Suggested usages:

“You telling me that Lost is a better television show than The Wire? You must be smoking that Abdul.”

“If he thinks I’m driving way across town to pick him up, he must be on that Abdul!”

I hope this goes better than my attempt to get Black folks to start using “awesome.”

02
Feb

Let’s see if Sports Center covers this.

Today, on The Huffington Post, current Chicago Bear special teamer Brendon Ayanbadejo speaks out about the state of diversity at his alma mater, UCLA. Amazingly, this year’s freshman class of 5,000 was only 2% Black. Ayanbadejo and Golden State Warriors guard Baron Davis–a fellow Bruin–have started a public awareness campaign called We Should Not Be the Only Ones.

I, and the other athletes who have joined me, think we should not be the only ones to get an education, because we can perform well on a field or on a court. We have little interest in politics, but we have a large interest in human rights. It should be a simple right for a young person of color in this country to have access to higher public education. Let’s start recruiting students, the way they recruited me and the rest of my friends, so we don’t get to a point where every black student on campus is an athlete.

Los Angeles Times columnist J.A. Adande addressed the issue and Ayanbadejo’s efforts in yesterday’s edition of the paper.

The numbers demand words. Loud words, angry words. For the fall 2006 freshman class, less than 100 African Americans enrolled, the fewest in more than 30 years. Twenty of them were on athletic scholarship, which means we’re getting dangerously close to making a fact from the stereotypical assumption that a black student on campus is an athlete. A ranking of African American student admissions in the fall of 2005 put UCLA 29th among the top 30 colleges and universities.

Ayanbadejo address more football specific issues over at his Super Bowl week blog.




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