Author: lance

Reader Tips

Tonight’s amusement en route to the Tips is a bit of a rarity: a song that expresses a conservative viewpoint. It’s a bit corny, but here, by an SDA reader’s request, is Tea Party member and lifelong conservative Ray Stevens (most famous, perhaps, for his 1970 hit Everything Is Beautiful, and for novelty songs like Gitarzan and The Streak) singing Come to the USA.
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Reader Tips

I’m Alan Partridge is an hilarious BBC situation comedy that follows the travails of a former talk-show host named Alan Partridge, an egotistical but insecure blow-hard in love with the sound of his own voice. As the series opens the recently-divorced Partridge, who is consumed at all times by his desire to be on TV again, has been living unhappily for six months in the Linton Travel Tavern while putting in time in the humiliating 4:30 am shift at tiny Radio Norwich (“From the Ouse to the Waveney…”.)
Partridge’s long-awaited lunch meeting with the head of BBC programming proves disastrous, as his increasingly desperate litany of last-ditch pitches for another TV show (“Inner City Sumo? Monkey Tennis?”) are serially rejected by an amused, and finally annoyed, Tony Hayers. Just when his professional prospects look completely hopeless, he receives a phone call telling him the good news: Tony Hayers has fallen off his roof and died, and will be replaced by a man named Chris Feather who had historically been much more supportive of Alan’s ideas. In tonight’s amusement en route to the Tips, the utterly callous and ever ambitious Partridge, played by Steve Coogan, shows up at Tony Hayers’ funeral, not to mourn, but to schmooze with Tony Feather in the interest of cadging himself another TV show.
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Reader Tips

The 1958 wide screen extravaganza South Pacific was an adaptation of the highly successful Rodgers and Hammerstein stage musical, set during WWII, which centered around the culturally-conflicted romance between a French Plantation owner who had fled his country and a Navy nurse from Arkansas stationed on the unnamed South Pacific island.
Tonight’s amusement en route to the Tips, a musical number from one of the film’s subplots, sees a wily, scheming, and avaricious Tonkinese peddler named Bloody Mary trying to pressure U.S. Marine Lt. Joseph Cable into marrying her daughter Liat. Bloody Mary would later attempt to emotionally blackmail Cable by informing him (in a calculated, premeditated rage, before storming off with her daughter in hand) that Liat will now have to marry an older Frenchman instead, but first she guilefully tries to appeal to his dreams of an idyllic existence on the neighbouring, mist-shrouded island of Bali Hai, where the mother and daughter live, by encouraging him to keep dreaming, to distract himself with pleasant thoughts, and to keep talking Happy Talk.
You are invited, as always, to provide your Reader Tips in the comments.

Reader Tips

There’s no beating around the bush in tonight’s amusement en route to the Tips: when our Romeo cuts straight to the chase, it’s bada bing, bada boom, mission accomplished. Playing in front of some seriously rhythmically-challenged Caucasoid dancers in a British TV studio, here’s Mississippi-born bluesman John Lee Hooker delivering the circumlocution anti-particle called Boom Boom.
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Reader Tips

I’m not sure if tonight’s musical selection is a actually a gospel song, as some claim, or if it’s an earthbound invitation, almost an admonition, to live, and to get off one’s high horse and face the proverbial music down here on the ground. It doesn’t really matter; any way you slice it, it’s a heartfelt invitation to communion, and an affecting and very human master stroke of a song. From his 1999 album Mule Variations, here’s Tom Waits singing Come On Up to the House.
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Reader Tips

Who Do You Think You Are? is an ongoing BBC documentary television series that shows celebrities, most of them British, undertaking to trace their family trees using public archives, DNA testing, and information from tracked-down distant relatives. Sometimes the results are intriguing – one TV personality learned that he was a descendant of William the Conqueror – and sometimes the family tree is full of run-of-the-mill folk who left behind no real information about their lives save for their occupation. Tonight’s amusement en route to the Tips features a spoof of the show in which writer/comedian Alexander Armstrong (who in real life is the aforementioned descendant of William the Conqueror) of the comedy team Armstrong and Miller searches, with an understated combination of pride, eagerness, and trepidation, for biographical details about his ancestors.
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Reader Tips

WBC heavyweight boxing champion Vitali Klitschko, a gentle, multilingual, well-spoken man with a doctorate in sports science, is a hugely popular public figure in the Ukraine. When he began toying with the idea of running for the office ofUkrainian president, his brother Vladimir, the WBO, IBO and IBF heavyweight champion, and also a Ph.D., warned him that while everybody in the Ukraine adores him now, half of the people in the country will suddenly dislike him at the moment he runs for office.
Vladimir’s advice was sound, for nothing on earth – save certain comments threads on blogs – is a contentious as professional politics. In tonight’s amusement en route to the Tips we span the globe to look at contentious moments in parliamentary politics, starring, in no particular order, the parliamentarians of Bolivia, Mexico, Taiwan, Korea, Sri Lanka, Russia, India, and, last but not least, the Ukraine, where Vitali (aka “Dr. Ironfist”) would certainly have tipped the balance of power had he been a parliamentarian.
Kumbaya. You are invited, as always, to provide your Reader Tips in the comments.

Reader Tips

Tonight’s amusement en route to the Tips, the last installment of our summer series of songs about particular cities, celebrate’s Nevada’s desert city of non-stop twenty-four hour excitement, with its black jack, poker, roulette wheels, one-armed bandits and neon lights. From the 1964 movie of the same name, here’s early-Elvis impersonator Elvis Presley nonchalantly hamming his way through the conga-heavy hip-swiveller Viva Las Vegas.
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Reader Tips

Scopitones were jukebox-like machines, popular mostly in French bars and cafes for a few years in the early 1960s, that played specially-produced 16mm films of musical performers, typically pop stars. Attempts to expand the Scopitone market elsewhere met with little success, and soon the rather hefty machines, which were notoriously difficult to maintain and repair, disappeared into the hands of a few collectors.
Many of the clips, though, which were the early equivalent of MTV videos, are still around. Tonight’s amusement en route to the Tips is a Scopitone film featuring the musical stylings of a woman named Yvette Horner, a Serbian-born French accordionist who to date has sold over 30 million records. In the clip, her undeniable virtuosity combines with a lighter-than-air, inconsequential tune and oddly dream-like visuals to make for a interesting and peculiar little cultural artifact: here’s Yvette Horner performing En Glissant.
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Reader Tips

The Violent Femmes were a rather unorthodox, stripped-down three piece folk-punk band from Milwaukee, Wisconsin who, during their heyday in the 80s and early 90s hovered between underground cult status and mainstream success. The thematically offbeat nature of their songs is at least partially attributable to the fact that Gordon Gano, the band’s songwriter and lead singer, was (he still is) a devout Christian; while nobody could consider the Femme’s music to be religious per se (the other two band members made clear to Gano that they weren’t amicable to that) Gano’s lyrics often expressed, if obliquely, a rooted unease with mass-culture morality.
In tonight’s amusement en route to the Tips, Gano sings with a disarmingly cheerful tension about the undeniable, there-it-is fallout – the widespread joy and damage – of a society weaned on American pop culture. From a live appearance on the old Dennis Miller TV show, here are the Violent Femmes performing a song from their 1991 album Why Do Birds Sing? called American Music.
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