Thursday, May 31, 2007

Politics, Pop Culture, and Pugilism...

Welcome to your weekly dose of Politics, Pop Culture, and Pugilism. If you want the poultry, you have to wait TWO weeks. We're taking next week off so that Mark can celebrate his birthday and Rev. John....well, he'll probably just be passed out in the yard somewhere.

That doesn't mean we're not preparing for future shows, and this is where you come in. We've been tossing around a few topics, and wanted to know your thoughts on any of them.

  • Decleration of Independents: A Thrid Party?
  • Fred Thompson: Shit or Get off the Pot
  • What's Left for the Bush Administration to drop the ball on?
  • Hillary Clinton's entrence music...we've got ideas...
  • What's left to do when your enemies keep coming at you and you don't want to kill them?


  • We welcome the feedback. Now here are a few links...

    POLITICS
    Obama's HillaryCare
    Russia Says New ICBM Can Beat Any System
    Bush Takes On Opponents of Immigration Deal
    U.S. Rejects EU-Asia Emissions Reduction
    GINGRICH ASSAILS BUSH, ROVE FOR REPUBLICAN 'COLLAPSE'...
    McCain to Rivals: Where's Your Immigration Plan?
    Fred Thompson will run, advisers say
    Thompson on the Run



    POP CULTURE
    Viewers Demand Imus
    NJ starting agency to battle obesity...
    Wendy's Manager Shot Over Chili Sauce
    Laptops are crippling millions with back problems
    Writer-Director (and Geek God) Judd Apatow Invites You Into His Mind
    Country Music Hall of Fame Spotlights Big & Rich
    'Donkey Kong' Record Holder Says New Flick Settles His Score


    PUGILISM
    FIGHTER SALARY BREAKDOWN FOR UFC 71
    DANA WHITE: "WE'RE GOING TO HAVE THEM ALL"
    As UFC rises, is boxing down for the count?
    UFC 71 gives us yet another surprise
    WEC to make televised debut on Versus this weekend
    UFC Explodes in Popularity

    Wednesday, May 30, 2007

    RADULICH: Fact or Fiction

    Every week 411Mania offers a debate column called Fact or Fiction which features a statement that the writers respond to. In said writer's opinion, the statemen is either a fact or it is fiction and then they explain why. Occasionally I contribute to the debate. Here is my latest contribution)

    1) The media is biased. Outlets are more concerned with picking and presenting news Their Way as opposed to being objective and impersonal.

    Fact - and I'm not going to bother with liberal or conservative slants because that's pointless. It's more about the news being owned by corporations. Corporations have one goal, make money for their investors. The news makes money by being content in which to install expensive commercials. Period. Whether it's CNN or FOX, O'Reilly or Olberman, it doesn't matter so long as people are turning in long enough to be convinced to buy the car, drugs or whatever is being advertised. It's the same thing with print media and radio. These outlets may have a political slant but that's secondary to the belief that whatever content they've chosen is a money maker so that's what gets produced. It's liberal or conservative slant is more a of a reflection of the content producer himself and less of media bias as a whole. As long as the show makes money, that's all the bosses care about. As far as being objective and impersonal, years ago somebody figured out that to get Americans to turn into the news en masse, you had to put on shows that were attractive to mass audiences and not confusing or complex, thus car chases overtook intellectual presentations and analysis. This actually started with the vision of bodies being brought back from Vietnam but that's a story for another day.

    2) There is a culture war in this country (note: this term was used before Bill O'Reilly made it recently popular, so don't say Fiction just cause you hate him).

    Fact - of course there's a culture war. It's a war between those who don't want to be judged for any behavior and for those that believe restrictions on behavior is a good thing. People like to lay this conflict at the feet of solely the secular progressives because typically they are the ones who are for lowering standards of behavior and making arguments for normalization of all behavior, deviant or otherwise but the far right is just as bad. The far right doesn't want to be judged for its radical behavior either. The culture war goes beyond progressive vs conservative and is really a battle between the selfless and mature vs the selfish and immature. Selfish people care only about themselves to the exclusion of all else and they can be either liberal or conservative. Selfish people are the ones lowering the debate to the benefit of themselves without thinking about the consequences for others. Selfish people do all of this without wanting to be confronted because rationally they have no leg to stand on. That's the culture war in a nut shell and it's been going on since the necessity of having to tolerate your neighbor or family member was replaced by the well-meaning but utterly disastrous notion that the government is responsible for caring for individuals.

    3) It really doesn't matter who we vote for, or if we vote at all. Politicans are pretty much all the same.

    Fiction - some are smarter and more thoughtful than others. Some are dutiful while others simply seek a kingdom to call their own. Some politicians are guided by their personal ethics while others only act in defense of their own elite position. The system balances things out making some politicians less or more effective than others but ultimately if you don't see the difference between Newt Gingrich and Nancy Pelosi and how they affect Washington differently then you are not really paying attention. Now, do all of these have personal foibles? Of course they do as they are human afterall. But that doesn't mean that all politicians are the same just because they are all fallible. Those are two different issues.

    4) Having more than just 2 dominant political parties to choose from is one primary solution to our nation's plights.

    Fact - If the Europeans do anything right, it's their electoral process. I like having lots of candidates to choose from with more than one decisive election to determine who should be the main leader. I think the run-off elections are a capital idea. I think people like Ralph Nader and Ron Paul should be viable options for American voters rather than having to choose between two lite brands or safe choices (John Kerry I'm looking in your direction). If the CT election of 2006 is any indication, Joe Lieberman shows us that in today's political culture, there is room for independants in the electoral process. Nowing, establing a viable third party than adequately threaten the big two will be a feat considering both are loathe to give up their dominance.

    Tuesday, May 29, 2007

    '08 Candidates Look for Boost From Ads

    By JIM KUHNHENN
    Associated Press Writer


    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Using humor, attitude and the occasional put-down, some presidential candidates are filling the airwaves with ads to stir activists and create an early, positive brand for their campaign.

    Mitt Romney has assembled a narrative with nearly $4 million in ads this year that have helped propel him from near obscurity to the top of GOP public opinion polls in two early nominating states, Iowa and New Hampshire.

    Democrat Bill Richardson, perhaps drawing confidence from Romney's experience, is buying significant advertising time in those states. He is running ads that spoof his second-tier status in the field despite a resume with extensive government experience. His poll numbers also have improved.

    Those ads, as well as smaller buys of air time by...click here for more.

    Monday, May 28, 2007

    REV JOHN: Big & Rich and Memorial Day

    I thought I'd introduce everyone to Big & Rich this week. They're the ones who renewed my love of country music, but more importantly, their song "8th of November" is apropos to the holiday.

    To our brothers and sisters who have seen combat and who are in combat, and to their family and friends, from the bottom of our hearts, thank you for your service and sacrifice to our county.



    FISHER HOUSE - Supporting America's military in their time of need, we provide "a home away from home" that enables family members to be close to a loved one at the most stressful time -- during hospitalization for an illness, disease or injury. Learn more.

    INTREPID FALLEN HEROES FUND - The Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund is a leader in supporting the men and women of the Armed Forces and their families. Begun in 2000 under the auspices of the Intrepid Museum Foundation, and established as an independent not-for-profit organization in 2003, the Fund has provided close to $60 million in support for the families of military personnel lost in service to our nation, and for severely wounded military personnel and veterans. These efforts are funded entirely with donations from the public, and hundreds of thousands of individuals have contributed to the Fund. 100% of contributions raised by the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund go towards these programs; all administrative expenses are underwritten by the Fund’s Trustees. Learn More.

    Sunday, May 27, 2007

    5/27: PCLIVE! The Recap...

    Sounds clips of today's show can be heard on our MySpace Page, or head over to BlogTalkRadio to download the full show.

    We'll be off next week. See you on June 10th!

    (Though we'll still be blogging, so don't forget to come back each day.)

    Friday, May 25, 2007

    Majority Favor Changing Immigration Laws, Poll Says

    Don't forget to tune in this Sunday when Taco Bell presents the 37th Annual PCLIVE! Memorial Day Viva La Raza Illegal Immigration Spectacular


    Majority Favor Changing Immigration Laws, Poll Says
    By JULIA PRESTON and MARJORIE CONNELLY


    As opponents from the right and left challenge an immigration bill before Congress, there is broad support among Americans — Democrats, Republicans and independents alike — for the major provisions in the legislation, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News Poll.

    Taking a pragmatic view on a divisive issue, a large majority of Americans want to change the immigration laws to allow illegal immigrants to gain legal status and to create a new guest worker program to meet future labor demand, the poll found.

    At the same time, Americans have mixed feelings about whether the recent wave of immigration has been beneficial to the country, the survey found, and they are sharply divided over how open the United States should be to future immigrants.

    Half of all Americans say they are ready to transform the process for selecting new immigrants as proposed in the bill, giving priority to job skills and education levels over family ties to the United States, which have been the foundation of the immigration system for four decades.

    Point by point, large majorities expressed support for measures contained in the legislation that has been under debate since Monday in the Senate. The nationwide telephone poll did not ask respondents about the immigration bill itself, but there were questions about its most significant provisions. It was conducted May 18 to 23 with 1,125 adults, and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

    The bill, which is backed by President Bush and a bipartisan group of senators, would...click here for more.

    REV. JOHN: Random Thoughts for 5/25

    Just so we're clear, I could give a damn what Rosie O'Donnell or Elizabeth Hasselback think about anything. And before he gets involved, Donald Trump's opinion don't matter none either.

    A pal-o-mine today, in an effort to mock me for my appreciation of country music, stumbled up on a Zen-like question I'd like to hear everyone's opinion on: If you went back in time and saw yourself at seventeen years old, who would win in a fight? Could you take younger you, or would younger you whoop that ass? I'd kick my teenage ass. Younger me was really an out of shape lump of shit. Older me eats better, works out, and has taken a few kickboxing lessons. This is what we think aboot during the day instead of doing actual work.

    To me, leadership is doing what you think is right even if it's not popular. That said, for a party that says it's looking for leadership, I find it funny that the talking heads all cry that John McCain's career is over everytime he so much as says "God Bless You" to a Democrat after they sneeze.

    Baby if you've ever wonder if I still love you, then girl never wonder again. We can find our way out of this cloud we've been under if we fight for who we were back then. I'll make the first move and I'll say I'm sorry, and I'll take the blame for the things that I've done, because we'll both lose more than our pride if we don't take a stand. You don't act like my woman, and I sure don't feel like your man.

    I caught Ozzy Osbourne performing his latest single on "Smackdown" last week. Am I the only who is old enough to remember a time when Ozzy Osbourne didn't suck? I'm talking way back to "No More Tears" and earlier. Now he's become a parody of himself along the lines of Christopher Walken. Walken doesn't even act anymore as much as he does an impersonation of Jay Mohr doing an impersonation of Christopher Walken.

    I've decided that since Don Imus is off the air, or at the very least is taking the summer off to teach sick children how to be cowboys before he signs with satellite radio, I'm going to pick up where he left off and make it my responsibility to force introduce all my Yankee friends to country music. Personally, I can't understand how anyone could not like country music to begin with. All of the songs are either about drinking, love, or Jesus. Even if you hate Jesus, everyone has at least a moderate appreciation of the other two.

    So my friend Ms. B sends me a text yesterday that went as follows: I am in the library by the computers and one kid said to the other kid..."im bout to take a picture of my dick and put it on there...." She was mortified because they were only thirteen. I thought it was funny that, out of all her friends, she though to text this to me because she knew I'd be amused by it (and would shout her out in my blog). Now she knows how I felt when I was at the store buying milk and bananas and the girl behind the counter was wearing them real shorty shorts, was rocking the baby-T (complete with bra strap hanging out)...and had braces. One of those things is not like the other, and so on.

    Monday, May 21, 2007

    REV. JOHN: Introducing James Otto

    I've decided that since Don Imus is off the air, or at the very least is taking the summer off to teach sick children how to be cowboys before he signs with satellite radio, I'm going to pick up where he left off and make it my responsibility to force introduce all my friends to country music. Personally, I can't understand how anyone could not like country music to begin with. All of the songs are either about drinking, love, or Jesus. Even if you hate Jesus, everyone has at least a moderate appreciation of the other two, you know what I'm saying?

    Anyway, today I'd like you to meet James Otto.





    Sunday, May 20, 2007

    PCLIVE! The Recap for 5/20

    Sounds clips of today's show can be heard on our MySpace Page, or head over to BlogTalkRadio to download the full show.

    As for next week, May 27th, I have but fifteen words for you...

    Taco Bell presents the 37th Annual PCLIVE! Memorial Day Viva La Raza Illegal Immagration Spectacular

    Friday, May 18, 2007

    REV JOHN: Random Thoughts for 5/18

    Tuesday night I found myself drinking a beer, wearing camouflage shorts and a dirty wifebeater, flipping between the country music awards and the Republican presidential debate. And I said to myself, "Self, so this is what Jeff Foxworthy is always talking aboot." It would've been even funnier if the 42" Plasmatron 3000 was on top of a 60" TV that didn't work. I'm not really a Foxworthy fan, and Bill Engvall couldn't be less funny if he actually tried to be less funny. I am however a Larry the Cable Guy fan and Ron White is my favourite comedian period, so...I don't even know what my point was.

    Random Fact That I Learned This Week Number One: Apparently for every thirty-five pounds a man loses, he gains an inch of penis. I don't know what the science behind it is, but my friend Patia told me so and she's, like, mad smart.

    Speaking of the debate, we'll be discussing it in detail this Sunday, but let me just say that it was much better than the last one, all the guys I like had a good night, and it's aboot time we saw some action. Had this been Japanese Parliament, Rudy Giuliani would have run over and punched Ron Paul in the nuts, and that would have been awesome. When John McCain "clapped back" to Mitt Romney, you knew in his head he wanted to end by saying, "Bitch." If all these cats want to be my President, I want to see the fire in their eyes. Now lets see if the D's follow suit and stop kissing Hillary Clinton's ass.

    When it comes crashing down and it hurts inside, you gotta take a stand. It don't help to hide. You hurt my friends and you hurt my pride. I gotta be a man. I can't let it slide. I am a real American. Fight for the rights of every man. I am a real American Fight for what's right. Fight for your life!

    I watched the Mitt Romney interview on 60 Minutes. There's was a lot of ballyhoo about how Mike Wallace asked him if he ever had pre-marital sex, and like with most things, it got blown way out of proportion. He asked in jest, Romney laughed it off, and they moved on to other questions. It took up all of five seconds of a fifteen minute interview, yet it got portrayed as if Wallace was grilling him on his sex life and Romney was ready to storm off. People really need to get a sense of humour.

    Relative to the media, I've checking out some of the "watchdog sites" for yucks (both liberal and conservative, because I actually do try and stay fair and balanced). And while I understand there is a lot of biased reporting (though I think we need to defer between news, "news," and the infotainment on the cable networks), there also seems to be a lot of "I don't like the way you worded that question, therefore you are biased against my ideology." I find it fascinating that someone like Tim Russert can be both biased against liberals AND biased against conservatives at the exact same time...and in some cases during the course of the same interview.

    Random Fact That I Learned This Week Number Two: You womens wanna listen closely to this one. Apparently drinking scotch whiskey helps relieve menstrual cramps. I can't reveal who told me this, except to say that they are in fact the smartest person I know, and they were quoting a girlie doctor friend of theirs. Yeah, yesterday was a weird week.

    Thursday, May 17, 2007

    Ron Paul in the Situation Room - May 16, 2006



    This is why I defend this man and if he makes it into the FL primary, I will vote for him (if Newt isn't running).

    Wednesday, May 16, 2007

    RADULICH: In Defense of Ron Paul



    In 2004, one of the criticisms of John Kerry that was bandied about was that he was too nuanced. In other words, his views of the world and governmental policy therein were as complex as the issues themselves and therefore not clear enough for a public that wants its leaders to speak to them in as plain English as possible. That’s a sad commentary on American political life but a reality nonetheless. The voting public seems to be more comfortable with either Captain America or Dr. Phil as president than someone versed in the issues and knowledgeable enough to that one cannot simply project a black-and-white view of things and expect to accomplish anything of value. Contrary to what many on the right seem to believe, the world is just not divided into simply good and bad.

    I felt sorry for Kerry in that when he was being honest with himself and the public, the message got muddled in our sound byte happy media and he was made to look foolish when he in fact was thoughtful. But if the media and voters were mean toward Kerry for having more than a child’s view of complex issues, those same culprits have been downright cruel to poor old GOP presidential candidate Rep. (TX) Ron Paul.

    Paul has been a hoot in the past two debates. He’s been brutally honest and he seems to be one of the few people running for the nomination that actually remembers the GOP platform. The Republican’s used to be about nothing more than restricted government intervention, low taxes and non-interventionist policies. In other words, Republican’s are supposed to believe in leaving people to their own device-win, lose or draw. In social work lingo it’s called “rugged individualism” and it means that you take care of yourself and the government will make sure you keep as much of what you make as you can. It is simple math really. Lower or lowest taxes means that the government is only minimally involved in your inalienable rights. This is why traditionally Republicans have been against social service programs and an interventionist foreign policy. Contrary to what the liberals would have you believe, it’s not because all Republican are old, white ogres who hate people, it’s because entitlement programs and foreign wars costs money and money costs people their freedom and privacy. Paul has been trying to remind people of this in the sparingly little time he’s had at the previous two debates.

    In fact, at the Fox debate on 5/15/07, Paul made statements that got him eviscerated by the mind-numbingly oafish pundits as well as a jingoistic spanking from the most liberal of the contenders, Mayor Rudy Giuliani. You can hear Paul’s comments for yourself in the embedded video but the crux of what he said was that if you want to fix the economy you have to cut spending and the best places to cut are the monsters of bureaucratic inefficiency, the departments of Homeland Security, Education and Energy. He also said that the reason we were attacked on 9-11 is because we had been bombing Iraq for about 10 years prior and said attack was retaliatory in nature.

    For this, Ron Paul has nearly usurped Hillary Clinton as the Right’s new boogeyman.

    The problem is that if you actually took the time to think about, and read about what Paul was saying, he actually makes perfect sense and is telling the awful truth. In our sound-byte happy country, it sounds like he blaming the US for being attacked by Al Qaeda on 9-11. However, if given more time and the ability to set the record straight in an arena where the audience doesn’t have Attention Deficit Disorder, I’m sure he would say the following:

    We were in fact bombing Iraq after the first Gulf War. That was part of the containment policy. As a matter of fact, part of the reason the liberals thought that Iraq didn’t have WMD’s is because of said containment policy. We were monitoring them night and day as well as enforcing no-fly zones in the South and over Kurdistan. We were based in Saudi Arabia both during the conflict as well as after the war had ended. This was one of Osama Bin Laden’s big demands of the United States. On top of wanting to convert or murder all infidels, he also wanted the US out of Saudi Arabia, or as he likes to call it, the holy land. Now this little wrinkle hardly gets any mention in the news what with all of the focus on the much more easier understand former issue but it was in fact a serious demand. The problem was that he didn’t have much of a right to make a demand. The Saudi Royal Family had us there by request and stayed in Saudi Arabia at their pleasure. In any case, the attacks by Al Qaeda in the 90’s and then 9-11 were partly his answer to our unwillingness to leave Saudi Arabia. This was Ron Paul’s point. Had Osama Bin Laden gotten his way and been allowed by the Saudi Royal Family to lead the Mujahudeen against Saddam Hussein in Kuwait as he did (with CIA help) against the Russians in Afghanistan, there probably wouldn’t be an Al Qaeda today. However, as history has shown us, that’s not what happened.

    The other statement he’s being attacked on is his idea that we should cut the department of Homeland Security (and Education and Energy). Again, in sound-byte land that means he suggesting we do not defend ourselves or protect our national interests in time of war. While that assertion made for great television, it was also idiotic. In the land of attention spans, what Ron Paul was getting was that beyond the National Guard and other branches of the military, the job of safety and security is supposed to fall on state agencies and not some monstrous federal bureaucracy that is so convoluted it can’t function in a time of crises. His point was that you don’t keep people safe by creating more red tape; you do so by giving the state agencies all of the resources they need to get the job done. That doesn’t take more bureaucrats, that just takes good common sense and better budgeting.

    It’s the same thing with Energy and Education. Instead of having the government control something that it does not understand and is woefully unqualified to govern, you should allow but to be provinces of state and private enterprise exclusively. It is the job of the governors of each state to manage their own affairs and getting the federal government involved only muddies up the waters. More to the point, you end up, as we have, throwing away billions in tax dollars are bureaucratic machines don’t function very well and don’t actually solve the problem.

    Ron Paul’s problem is not that he was wrong, it’s that he was too right for an audience that doesn’t have time for long complicated answers.

    Sunday, May 13, 2007

    PCLIVE! The 5/13 Recap...

    Sounds clips of today's show can be heard on our MySpace Page, or head over to BlogTalkRadio to download the full show.

    As for next week...

    SUNDAY, AUGUST 20TH!

    Mark is the rootinest, tootinest, ideological hombre on the internet, with a PhD in Blogonomics (and he ain't no mamby, pamby either)...

    Rev. John is a double fisted drinkin, crazy, son of a [bad word] who'll put the rhythm in your blues and have you screaming out for Jesus...

    These two folks come together each an every Sunday morning for sixty minutes of a rompin' stompin' political and pop cultural good time. It's a piece of magic we like to call PCLIVE! And unless Hannity and Colmes finally profess their love to each other, here's what you can expect...


  • ErectionElection 2008: A Declaration of Independents?
  • Disposable Culture: Why Owning Stuff isn't Cool Anymore
  • Something Else
  • Plus you can't expect to start your week without the BUCGAW REPORT! It's all at our new start time of 10:00 AM EST! If you'd like to join us (and if you don't, you hate the troops) all the info can be found at Blog Talk Radio.


    Find out what grinded Mark's gears this week:
    http://blog.myspace.com/punkrockconservative

    And hey look, Rev. John has a blog too:
    http://blog.myspace.com/brodigan2016

    Friday, May 11, 2007

    You are a full glass of GOD or RAGE AGAINST THE "ER"

    By Patia B.
    Mamba Magazine


    We are all full glasses of God.

    I came to this conclusion at 6 am, when I woke up and felt that I had no other purpose in life than to stare at the glass of water that sits at my bedside. (Anyone who actually knows me knows that "cute" little throat scratching that I have in the middle of the night…thus making the water a vital part of my existence..and a vital comfort for everyone who is in earshot.)

    ANYWAY…as I stared at the water I contemplated the irony of the "half empty/half full" phenomena. I couldn't decide whether I thought the glass was half empty or not. I couldn't decide why I couldn't decide….and suddenly as I looked around my room….contemplated my life (no job..in my parents house…losing my mind (literally and beautifully)… just sort of living…)

    There is no glass…there is only God. So in essence we are all full glasses of GOD. Everything else is a misconception...

    We are all...click here for more.

    Thursday, May 10, 2007

    REV. JOHN: Random Thoughts for 5/10

    I have a friend who will fill me in on what everyone is talking aboot on the talk radio, and apparently everyone (at least on the right side of the dial) has realized that John McCain and Fred Thompson are essentially the same person (a conclusion we on PCLIVE! came to a few weeks ago). The only difference is that Thompson speaks with a southern accent. That must be why everyone thinks he's the most qualified.

    People seem surprised that Spiderman 3 broke every opening weekend record when the movie was terrible. I'm not. It doesn't matter how bad the movie is, people were still going to see it just because it was opening weekend and the thing to do. It's like being a battered wife. You know it's going to hurt, yet we can't stop ourselves from going back (like we will and Spiderman 4 comes out in a few years).

    I'm really tempted to get tickets for this year's Projekt Revolution tour. Linkin Park, My Chemical Romance and Taking Back Sunday are probably my three favourite bands to come out this decade (plus seeing TBS at Jones Beach would be cool). The rub is that I think my rock concerts days are behind me. I usually wind up feeling like a narc or a chaperone.

    At this rate, I'll be heading for electric chairs. I'm only human with my cross to bear. When she described her underwear, I forgot all the rules my rabbi taught me in the old schul. You're too young to be this empty girl. I'll prepare you for a sick dark world. Know that you'll be my downfall, but I call, and I call, and I call...

    I hate to admit it, but MSNBC's "Morning Joe" with Joe Scarborough and John Ridley may be a winner. Scarborough is a former Republican Congressman, the host of "Scarborough Country," and quite possibly the whitest guy on the network. Ridley is a screenwriter, a blogger for the "Huffington Post," and one of them black African Americans. I was laughing my ass off this morning, though if I find it funny I'm sure there's a whiny pussy "media" watchdog somewhere who is trying to see how many words ending with "-ist" and "-ism" they can squeeze into one blog post complaining aboot it.

    I think I quit buying CD's. I definitely steal my share of music off of da' net, but if I really dig the artist I'd still by the CD. The rub is that I'll either rip in onto my laptop, or listen to it once and leave it on the floor of my car for a few months. Plus now that I have the FM transmitter for the ol' iPod, I don't even listen to the CD's anyways, so what's the point? I bought the new Travis album off of iTunes, and pre-ordered Bon Jovi and Linkin Park. As far as the transmitter goes, I know it doesn't get the best reception. The trick is turning the volume up loud enough where the music drowns out the static.

    After the debate last Thursday night, I turned on Hannity and Colmes, because they had Newt Gingrich on and I figured the former speaker of the house would have a better insight then the debate spin room. Hannity wanted to make an issue out of John McCain saying that there were mistakes made in the war, which a) no shit and b) is something McCain's been saying for years, but I think the implication the host was making was that McCain's comments were "demoralizing our troops." So Hannity asked Newt to comment, at which point the former speaker strongly defended John McCain (almost in an "I want to be your V.P." way), agreed that mistakes were made, and even had a kind word for Joe Biden (which is a "D" if you didn't know). I sware, Sean Hannity looked like he wanted to cry.

    Wednesday, May 09, 2007

    Stop the Presses: Al Sharpton's a Hatemongering Hypocrite

    By John Ridley
    The Huffington Post


    File this one under the heading THINGS WE ALREADY KNOW, right next to "water is wet" and "sunshine is warm." Al Sharpton is a hypocrite. And a hatemongering one at that.

    When we were last visited by - or rather forced to endure - Reverend Al, he was once again snatching up the scepter of media-anointed spokesman for All Things Black.

    It was the heady days of the Affair Imus. The women of the Rutgers B-ball team had the kink of their hair and the level of their sexuality called into question by the I-Man. Al, as Al is wont to do, took it upon himself to act without invitation and speak for those who were perfectly capable of speaking for themselves (for those keeping score, that's hypocrisy number one).

    Toward the tail end of that TV news cycle whipped storm, when it was pointed out to Al that a variation of Imus's rant could be heard with an exponent in heavy rotation within a certain variety of rap music, Al promised to go at the extreme ends of the music business with the same camera-whoring zeal with which he attacked Imus.

    On the 12th it will have been a month since Imus was dropped by CBS.

    Though I make a point of closely following the news, I was apparently otherwise occupied during the ten minutes Al was flogging his big Anti-misogyny in Music Campaign.

    Or so I thought.

    As it turns out, it was Al who was otherwise occupied. Rather than take on misogyny, the man who decried there was no place in the culture for hateful language...well, he went out and fresh-brewed some hate talk of his own.

    During a debate held Monday at the New York Public Library with...(click here for more).

    RADULICH: On Spiderman 3, Hollywood Politics And Gender Roles

    For months many fans of fantasy and/or comic books looked forward to the third installment of one of Marvel's most beloved and successful comic book movie adaptations Spiderman. What made this movie especially appealing to fans was the inclusion of one of Spiderman's most infamous villains-turned-icon in his own right, the dastardly fiend, Venom. With CGI effects evolving at leaps and bounds and based on the successful representation of previous characters from the comic book, we, as fans, assumed that Venom, in both look and character would be phenomenal and worth the price of admission alone. Couple that aspiration with the general appreciation for all of the characters and unresolved plotlines in the Spiderman movies and you should have had what would make for a stellar movie viewing experience.

    However, as the old saying goes, the bigger they are, the harder they fall an in this case, expectations for the fantastic movie fell hard on comic book geeks from Tampa to NY. In short, nearly everyone I've spoken too after seeing Spiderman 3 thought it stunk. On the other hand both my wife and I enjoyed it and for her part, she's not even a fan of the movies or the comic book (I however am a huge fan and even bigger mark for Venom/the alien costume).

    I think that this was much like the Hulk movie directed by Ang Lee in that it was a clear case of the director and writers making a compelling movie for the wrong audience. Fantasy fans (Sci-Fi, comic, D&D, etc.) don't particularly want to be bogged down in complex, sympathetic characters and plot lines. The fantasy experience should be fairly straightforward; bad guys are bad, good guys are good, bad guys threaten us, good guys save the day and win the girl. In the middle of all of this there should be lots of fighting, cool effects, and plenty of destruction.

    Sam Raimi and company did not do this with Spiderman 3. In fact, one can safely say that Spiderman 3 was not really a fantasy picture, per se. This was a movie about relationships and forgiveness staring characters from the fantasy realm. All of the characters were complex people with multiple motivations, wants and desires capable of being both sympathetic as well as antagonistic. The best example of this that I can think of was the infamous kiss between Mary Jane Watson and Harry Osborn. Under normal circumstances, a woman in film that feels she has been slighted by her love and finds warmth and comfort in another mans arms does not invoke the reaction of the male audience members in the theater shouting, "Whore!" out loud. This kiss did in fact cause at least two instances of this from what my friends have told me.

    Sure in films past a man might have thought that to himself but most would not have been moved to hysterics the way this scene did to it's male patrons. The reason is actually fairly simple. Again, under normal circumstances, it is accepted that a conflicted woman on film might have an on-screen indiscretion that leads to an unfortunate act of intimacy. In fact, this kiss was fairly innocuous considering some other movies portrayal of women and their capacity said indiscretions. But Mary Jane Watson is not a character in a movie that examines these types of issues that plague real people. She's simply Spiderman's love interest; an ornament to be worn by the hero as he fights bad guys and rights wrongs thus she's not entitled to perfectly human imperfections. By kissing Harry Osborne she betrayed the beloved hero and of course that can't be tolerated and thus she's labeled a "whore."

    What I believe separates my wife and I from those who hated this film are issues that are actually two sides of the same coin. My wife had no fantasy expectations and was then free to enjoy a movie about people and their intertwining relationships. She even elbowed me when Mary Jane validated her belief that the man should always put his woman before himself or anybody else, even if you are Spiderman. While I can comic fans reacting harshly to such an assertion as it has to place in a boy's playground, the women in the audience thought it was perfectly natural for her to say that nor understood why it might just be a bit out of place in a fantasy movie. Fantasy is where boys can be unfettered in their imaginations so it breaks the rules to be told that you can be unchained save you keep yourself tied to your lady first.

    I on the other hand did have fantasy expectations of the movie but once I realized where Raimi and company were going I let go of them and just accepted the movie for what it was and not what I wanted it to be. This is the eternal struggle between audience and Hollywood. Ego plays a part. Most professionals in Hollywood don't want to make the same old thing over and over again. With the amount of crap that gets made year after year this might sound funny but many in the movie industry consider themselves to be artists. Artists typically want to find some new frontier to explore or at the very least something fresh to share with an audience that is becoming jaded to movie magic. I'm not Sam Raimi but I can imagine what he might have been thinking when he and the writers put the Spiderman 3 script together. At the very least he was probably thinking that nobody wants to see the same old super hero action movie so let's do something different. Ang Lee I'm sure had the same thought and ran into the same problem with his albatross, the Hulk.

    It's the same mentality that explains why people continue to cheer for Hulk Hogan despite the fact that these days he can't put on very good matches unless guys who can have 4 carry him star matches with broomsticks. We like our hero stories to be simple and easily defined-Black and white, not shades of gray. But when someone like Raimi or Lee goes off the reservation and overly complicates our beloved hero stories, people simply get pissed. We paid for a simple hero story and that's what we want. Now as I said earlier I enjoyed Spiderman 3 but that's only because I knew I wasn't watching a fantasy story anymore and thus I could enjoy it on a different level-the level the director intended for me to enjoy it on.

    The last complaint I've heard about Spiderman 3 is yet another example of a fantasy coming to life and falling victim to the harsh politics of Hollywood. Now on this complaint I am sympathetic and I felt the same way as the rest of the detractors but since I understood, I got over it fairly quickly. The problem many had with this film is that both the heroes and villains could not keep their masks on to save their life. Every 30 seconds it seemed like the costumed characters needed to show of their familiar Hollywood faces. This is normal fare for Hollywood. Studios pay good money for name/face actors and their not going the throw it all out of the window because said faces need to be covered with masks (for the oh-so-important-to-the-fans character continuity). As much as it pained me to wait for two hours for Venom to show up and when he finally does he spends nearly the entire time out of mask, (don't even get me started on Spiderman's ever-decreasing lack of secret identity) the studios and producers don't give a rat's patoot about Venom or his fans. They do however care a lot about Topher Grace and the belief (by them) that it is not Venom that puts asses in seats but rather that 70's kid Topher Grace that brings them in a million score.

    It's the Judge Dredd effect. You can't keep marketable faces covered up because then you'll lose value. Why pay for Sylvester Stallone, Topher Grace, Tobey McGuire, and James Franco when if they are just going to wear a mask you can get Tom, Dick and Harry Nobody for a considerably lower price. Not to mention with the aforementioned use of CGI, it's much cheaper to film mostly the natural faces of the young actors than it is to film the expensive masked heroes. Topher Grace costs less and is more marketable (in Hollywood theory) than is Venom. Once you understand and submit to this that it is reality, one can enjoy the movie for what it is instead of what you think it should be.

    Gender roles and Hollywood politics may not have their place in the fantasy realm but the reality is that are here to stay. I think there can be room for both if given a chance and handled properly. Spiderman 3 might have been able to incorporate both elements without stinking (by the fans assessment) but the fans have to be willing to accept both first. At this juncture, until fantasy fans are willing to compromise and deal with reality, I think we are in for some long summers.

    On the other hand, there's always Pirates 3 to look forward to.

    Tuesday, May 08, 2007

    Monday, May 07, 2007

    RADULICH: I'm Not Dead Yet

    This is my first entry in the post-Progressive Conservatism era. You see, I was pretty much done with writing as I had no time or real interest in writing about the news anymore. However, the good Rev John suggested that instead of limiting myself to just the news, why don't I write whatever I want, of any length at all and we'd rename the blog PC Live, seeing as the show is the focus now anyway. So after two weeks of thinking about it and deciding to do it but not having the time or the inclination, I'm finally submitting my first entry of limitless possibilities and the thing that's most pressing on my mind is…

    Who thinks Rage Against the Machine is still relevant? Honestly, the only people who still listen to them probably don't vote or read the news. Organizing for political power and influence through music made sense when there were few ways to tap into the burgeoning population of educated middle income white kids but that was also 40 years ago. Music is not, despite the mainstream media's insistence that it is, a relevant political tool. Fans of music, especially metal, don't care enough about politics to sway anyone in authority or have so little knowledge of the issues that they cause more harm than good. De La Rocha basically used violent words to incite a crowd that will beat each other up to the deafening cacophony of stereo hiss and sound checks.

    The real story here just how lazy the press really is. Instead of doing research and trying to understand and break down complex issues, they collectively opt to take what amounts to basket weaving 101 in paying so much attention to pop culture and it's dubious relationship to politics.

    I may not be dead yet as a writer but its stories like this that make me as least wish for a short coma.

    Sunday, May 06, 2007

    Politics, Spiderman, and How to Kill a Wife...

    Our 5/6 show was the funnest one we've done in a while, but don't take our word for it...

    Listen to highlights on our Myspace Page, or...

    Listen to the entire show on Blog Talk Radio.

    We're still working on next week. If you have any ideas on what we should talk aboot, let us know.

    Thursday, May 03, 2007

    Imus hires attorney, will likely sue CBS

    NEW YORK (CNN) -- Former radio talk show host Don Imus has hired one of the country's top trial lawyers to sue CBS Radio following his dismissal last month for making racial and sexual on-air comments about members of the Rutgers University women's basketball team.

    Attorney Martin Garbus told CNN Wednesday that he has agreed to represent Imus in a wrongful breach of contract suit against his former employer.

    Garbus would not disclose when he was retained by Imus but said he plans to file an action against CBS in the near future. Calls made to Imus by CNN were not returned.

    A CBS spokesman declined comment.

    Imus had $40 million remaining on a multiyear contact that began in 2006 and included a clause that CBS wanted him to be "irreverent" and "controversial," according to CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin, who was shown part of the contract.

    "Company (CBS Radio) acknowledges that Artist's (Imus') services to be rendered hereunder are of a unique, extraordinary, irreverent, intellectual, topical, controversial and personal character and that programs of the same general type and nature containing these components are desired by Company and are consistent with Company rules and policies."

    Toobin said the legal issues in the Imus case are simple: "Did Imus breach his contract by saying what he did about the Rutgers basketball team?"

    CBS dismissed Imus on April 12, eight days after he called the Rutgers players "nappy-headed 'hos" on his radio show, "Imus in the Morning."

    "What stands out in the contract is he is supposed to be controversial and irreverent. That's what his statement about the Rutgers basketball team was," Toobin said.

    "How is CBS going to argue that what he said was so controversial and so offensive that it isn't what they asked for in the contract?"

    Wednesday, May 02, 2007

    5/2: RandomThoughts w/ Rev. John

    I get up at an ungodly hour in the morning to go to the gym, and while I have the TV on I'll still catch some of the infomercials for "Girls Gone Wild." After years of watching these commercials with black bars over all the fun parts, I downloaded on to see what all of the ballyhoo was aboot. As far as I can tell it's nothing but a bunch of drunk girls, marginally attractive at best, licking on each other and touching themselves. And while there's nothing wrong with that (and dare I say, it should be encouraged), it's hardly worth $19.95.

    I don't know what's worse - my friend calling to say how he's a slave to fast food commercials, or the fact that I knew he was going to Arby's for the 5 for $5.49 (which we re-titled the "Pick Five You Fat Fuck") because I saw the same commercial last night and was wondering if there was an Arby's in the area? He commented that he's been sliding off his diet. I say if you're ordering five things off of a fast food menu, there's no diet to speak of.

    I'm all for calling public figures on hypocrisy when it comes to saving the Earth and global warming (along the "do as I say, not as I do" tip), but let's keep some perspective. There's a world of difference between G.Q. Smoothe or MC $tereoType using private airplanes for frivolous uses...and a PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN needing one to transport a staff of hundreds. All the douchebag radio shows are criticizing the Dem candidates because they didn't carpool to the debate. Imagine what they would be saying if Hillary Clinton missed it altogether because Jet Blue cancelled all flights out of JFK? And if even if it was "frivolous," that's not an excuse to leave all the lights on in the house or ask them to double bag your laundry detergent when it has a handle on it.

    I'm still waiting for a good day. I think I've held this long enough. I think it's safe to tell you some things. It's not just what you say to people and it's not the way you look at me. It's the way you present yourself for all your worst critics to see. And it feels like I'm at an all-time low, slightly bruised and broken from our head on collision.

    Why can't I believe in equality for women, yet still think that Hillary Clinton couldn't be anymore transparent if she were invisible? I watched the debates this week and when she bought up her and "Bill" going to Columbine you could almost hear her saying to herself, "Dramatic pause, try and look upset." If you want to call me biased, that's fine. I know when I appear on the Sunday morning shows, it won't be with a (D) next to my name. But at least with Barrack Obama or John Edwards I get the sense that they have a vision for America. With Hillary Clinton, I think she just wants to be President.

    If there's one thing I miss aboot working in the mall, it's that first day in Spring where the weather is just warm enough for all the girls to decide it's time to take out the clothes that shows off the goods. It's like they have a hotline that tells them "Ok girls, it's sunny out. It's time for everyone to start showing off the goods." And oy vey, do they show off the goods! They hit the malls and the beaches in the shorty shorts and the tops that make you say, "huh huh...boobs." God bless America.

    It amuses me when I hear all the D's running for President saying something to the effect of, if they new then what they no now, they wouldn't have voted for the war. The reason I find this funny is because all the Democrats I know (friends, family, etc.) to a person all seemed to know then what they still know now. And while I'm not one for arm-chair quarterbacking (especially when my brothers and sisters are out risking their lives and I'm just blogging in the basement), I find it curious that a general manager from Hooters seemed to have a better grasp of the world than a senator on the Armed Services Committee.

    Tuesday, May 01, 2007

    No Pants Day is THIS Friday. Spread the word.

    Post a bulletin telling everyone that No Pants Day is this Friday, May 4th.

    No Pants Day is a day where everyone, be they students, respectable businessmen, or cherished community leaders, leave their pants behind. Usually this means wearing thick, appropriately modest boxer shorts, but bloomers, slips, briefs, and boxer-briefs all work as well.

    http://www.nopantsday.com for more information