One more night alone, and then da wife will be back tomorrow. That should make the cats happy, since they aren’t used to nobody giving a shit whether they eat or not. Not that I’m starving them, of course; their dry food bowl is always full, and I give them some canned food if they’ve eaten the last bit I gave them (and they schmooze me sufficiently). But if they don’t think that’s good enough, well, that’s OK by me, too. And, funny, they eventually eat what I give them (the real trick is to not give them too much at once). I run a tight ship here.
The dogs’ beds are on my side, and one nice thing about having our bed to myself is that I can slip out the other side without having my toes licked and my egress blocked. It doesn’t mean I can go to the bathroom without an entourage, of course, but I get a bit of a head start. It’s nice to be able to get to the toilet w/o having to step over a dog, though Fritz is short enough to come up behind me and stick his snout between my legs. Sometimes, when I’m still sleepy and my vision’s a bit foggy, I look down and think, “Holy Shit! what the hell happened with that last night?” It can also be difficult not to piss on his head, necessitating a last second change in trajectory. Not that he’d really care, I guess.
Some good news on the single payer healthcare front, as the House Education and Labor Committee approved – by a vote of 27-19, including 13 Republicans voting yes – an amendment introduced by Dennis Kucinich. Does it mean we get single payer? Well, no. The amendment mandates that a single payer state will receive the right to waive the application of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), which has in the past been used to nullify efforts to expand state or local government health care (John Nichols has more, over at The Nation). Bernie Sanders is introducing a similar bill in the Senate. So, if both Houses pass a healthcare reform bill with these amendments intact and if they make it through the conference committee and if the President signs it, and if your state enacts single payer, then you get it.
Easy enough. Other than the coalition of Senate DINOs who are trying to put the brakes on things while they figure out how they’re gonna make money off all this, and the Republicans who think killing reform will sink the Obama presidency.
So, while the Federal HC (sorry, tired of typing healthcare, and not certain if it ought to be healthcare, health care, or health-care, and don’t even get me started on singlepayer/single-payer/single payer) reform will most likely suck, this amendment breathes a little hope into the SP hopes of the ten states with active single payer efforts in their legislatures: California, Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota, Montana, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Washington.
I’m never overly optimistic about our state legislature, of course, but if they’re smart (for once) they’ll do it. It would be a real advantage for us to have over the Southern “fuck labor, fuck schools, fuck the environment, fuck the poor people – we don’t want no stinking taxes” states in attracting employers to the area, since it would save the huge cost of providing and administering health insurance for employees.
I wonder if Walter Cronkite’s family will be renting out Madison Square Garden to hold a memorial service, and holding a ticket lottery for admission? Well, of course not. That would be a circus, and I doubt Walter would be down for that. No golden, pharaoh-like casket, no performance by Dan Rather doing the JFK assassination report wearing one white glove, no trotting out the grandkids for a tearful soundbite, no paternity tests, no wondering who’s going to take care of the pet giraffe.
No doubt, Walter will be memorialized and eulogized, but I reckon it will be a dignified and somber celebration of possibly the last man people of my generation ever trusted (perhaps in large part because he looked a bit like a cross between Walt Disney and Captain Kangaroo). Somebody ought to hold a much-bleated memorial for the death of Journalism – at least as it applies to the “traditional” media in general, and network teevee in particular.
We haven’t really seen ya in a while, Uncle Walter, but we’ll miss ya.
Break Room Live and Walter Cronkite both dead within 48 hours of each other? My heart can’t take much more of this.
That was a pretty awesome shot.
I could name most of those faces. The Waltons were during my TV blackout years which hurt my score. You could see Walter had the juice, seated next to MTM. :hubba:
I guess you could say the same about my homeboy Don Knotts but Allen Funt may have been the big winner. :hubba: :hubba:
I thought it was quite telling, in that the news people were a recognized and well-represented piece of CBS’s 50 year history. I doubt there’ll be so many news folks in there for the 100th anniversary.
I almost said that myself. They were ‘STARS’, at least in my little world. And they pan right to Cronkite and Kuralt and MTM after the long shot.
Waddya think, Bob Denver and Richard Crenna? :bong: ?
I used to have an office in LA about 2 blocks from that CBS studio. It was next to the Farmers’ Market which is celebrating it’s 75th anniversary. I loved that place. there was a place there called Kokomo Cafe I would go to at every opportunity. I think they may have moved recently.
Gail Collins column culminates with an interactive quiz about the Fellowship (C Street house). Check out how much you’ve absorbed. Of course it’s quite funny.
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2009/07/18/opinion/20090718_COLLINSQUIZ.html
Check at about 1:40. h/t to Cat Chew
I thought it was quite telling, in that the news people were a recognized and well-represented piece of CBS’s 50 year history. I doubt there’ll be so many news folks in there for the 100th anniversary.
Comment by pjsauter — July 18, 2009 @ 10:01 am
Assuming they still even HAVE a news operation by then. It wouldn’t surprise me if eventually the major broadcast networks either reduce or eliminate their newsrooms, leaving broadcast news to CNN, MSNBC and Fux but keeping a skeleton crew around for major breaking events like dead celebrities or the 75th anniversary of Ronald Reagan’s first hangnail.
I grew up and learned about America watching Walter Cronkite five nights a week. Needless to say, it spoiled me for being able to watch what passes for network evening news these days. (Nothing personal, Katie. It’s not just you.)
And unfortunately, that’s the way it is.
This letter to the editor ran in today’s St Petersburg Times.
Cigarette taxes
A low-tax solution
When will the government learn? It raises taxes on cigarettes by a dollar a pack. What happened to “we won’t raise taxes on poor folks or the middle class”?
Higher cigarette taxes (and I am not a smoker) will be a burden on smokers. If they quit smoking, our Social Security will be worse off because more people will be living longer and collecting Social Security.
If taxes were lowered to zero on cigarettes, fewer people would quit and the death rate from smoking would increase, putting fewer people on Social Security and solving the system’s deficit problems.
Lowering taxes always is the answer to a sagging economy because it increases the tax revenue collected and increases job creation.
John L——–, Dade City
While we’re at it, let’s eliminate all traffic laws, signage and traffic signals. This will increase the death rate due to automobile accidents and put even fewer people on Social Security.
And let’s go a step further by closing all the hospitals and emergency rooms. This will free up doctors and nurses to care for those who can afford to pay, causing the death rate among the middle and lower classes to rise and putting even fewer people on Social Security.
I think we just solved the deficit and eliminated the need to do anything with health care!
Either the letter writer is a satirist on the level of Jonathan Swift, or we have some miserable bastards living in this area. Since he’s from Dade City, I’m going with the latter.
:fu:
I just sent a cleaned-up version of the above snark to the Times as a response to the letter. I’ll let you know if they have the good taste to print it.
Always bet on the miserable bastards :slap:
Now that’s the name for a band and the title for their 1st album.
What, no clip?
There was an Irish bar in Boulder for a long time that had a drink called “The Suffering Bastard”. I don’t know what all it had in it but I enjoyed drinking it every time- but “only one” 😮 :40:
There’s a bar in Trumansburg, NY, called the Rongovian Embassy that had three drinks called the Sick Bastard, the Dying Bastard, and the Dead Bastard. If you could drink all three, you got them for free.
The Rongo was started by a guy named Alex Brooks. Maybe Vernon would know who he is: he managed a band called Buffalongo, which had Keith Ginsberg, Basil Matychak, Ritchie Vitagliano, Doc Robinson, and Larry Hoppen (though not all at the same time, I don’t think).
strange how all the networks had elaborate video remembrances of walter within minutes of hm dying. not so strange when you consider them all vultures, waiting for him to die. this doesn’t sit well with me.
Without looking I think Hoppen was in Orleans with a Congress critter. Maybe a brother as well. I’ll look ’em up later, Off to see Holsapple and Stamey.
Web-not so strange. Walter was very famous and very old. All the networks have got obituaries ‘ready to run’ for deaths like his. I enjoyed seeing his continence one last time. Pretty reverential as far as I could see.
All media has obits ready to drop and we have been getting Walter warnings for a while. Frankly, I thought there would be more. There is a very rude pun op you laid out there, art, that I am just going to let pass. However, your clip shot was noted and is now met and at least one of my old college dorm rooms makes a cameo.
Yep, Hoppen was in Orleans (sang “Still the One” IIRC). Another person in the group at some point was Sherman Kelly, who wrote a song called “Dancin’ in the Moonlight.” They recorded it, but the record label never promoted it, and it went nowhere until Doc Robinson later recorded it with King Harvest (all a bunch of Cornell boys). Always liked that song.
There was an episode of the Mary Tyler Moore Show, where Mary gets stuck working after hours updating the obituary files, and she and Rhoda get a little giddy, and write a funny obit for Minneapolis’ oldest citizen. Unfortunately, the guy happens to die that night, and Ted Baxter reads it on the air.
Very funny. Not quite as funny as the Chuckles the Clown episode (“a little song, a little dance, a little seltzer down your pants”), but very funny nonetheless.
Orleans is on most of the world’s worst album covers list that makes the rounds.
I’d bet this got used as oppo in the congressional race.
:fire:
Eh, I bet most Republicans think John Hall was Darryl Oates’ partner.
:rofl2: