Friday, April 29, 2016

Hidden Agenda

This 1990 film directed by Ken Loach takes on a complex political issue: the role of the British in Northern Ireland in the 1980s. There are good performances from many of the actors (including a young Frances McDormand), rousing action, atmospheric cinematography and plenty of local color. 

But the script makes too little effort to tackle the gray areas involved in this conflict. Instead, it chooses a melodramatic story line, with a decidedly "kick out the British" bias. The film barely acknowledges that plenty of people wanted Northern Ireland to remain part of the United Kingdom. That was in fact the will of the majority in a referendum held in 1973. 


This could have been a movie that showed how both sides had valid arguments to make, why both factions felt they needed protection from the other, and how that lead to brutal violence on both sides. But too often, the Brits are depicted as evil oppressors, scheming aristocrats who will stop at nothing to hold onto poor little Northern Ireland. McDormand's character, a crusader for civil liberties, seems interested only in documenting the Royal Ulster Constabulary's brutal practices against those who favor the Republican cause. Her virtuous character views Orange Order parades as "frightening... tribal rituals." But those who want the British out are given a much more sympathetic treatment: salt-of-the-earth ordinary folk who simply want freedom and sit crying in smoky clubhouses singing songs of rebellion. 

A more nuanced portrait of both factions was needed, but this film doesn't deliver it. Watch '71 (2014) instead.

Hidden Agenda is available from Netflix and Amazon. 

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

The Watlington Hoard

Selected items from the Watlington Hoard

Probably buried over 1,000 years ago, this coin hoard was discovered in a farmer's field in Oxfordshire, England. It includes over 180 coins from the reigns of Alfred the Great of Wessex and Ceolwulf II, last king of Mercia, as well as arm rings and ingots. The hoard has the potential to shed new light on the history of the period when Alfred defeated the Vikings and united Wessex and Mercia to form England, according to this article in Coin World magazine (April 27, 2016).

Sunday, March 27, 2016

Dare Me by Megan Abbott

305 pp, Reagan Arthur/Little Brown, 2012
ISBN 978-0-316-20323-4 (Kindle edition)

This is a novel about high school cheerleaders. But don't be put off by that: this is no teenage novel, coming-of-age story or run-of-the-mill thriller. It's dark, intense stuff with whip-smart writing. It's also my favorite book of 2016 to date. 


Dare Me is about a clash of wills between the captain of the cheerleading squad and their new bitch-queen coach, who refuses to be intimidated by mean girls. There's a death to be solved, and for that reason some will call this mystery or crime fiction. But it's much more: friendship, loyalty, jealousy, and how all those feelings can become entangled. These females are devious and conniving, caught up in their own rivalries. They have little time for the bewildered boys and men who wander around in the background. To these women, males are to be acted upon, not actors. Easily manipulated and ineffectual, you almost feel sorry for the guys. And as for parents, they're all but invisible. 

What makes this book special for me is the way Abbott gives her narrator, 16 year old cheerleader Addy Hanlon, the keen insights of an adult looking back on what it was like to be an adolescent. Here Addy explains her attitude towards cheerleading:

"None of us really cheer for glory, prize, tourneys. None of us, maybe, know why we do it at all, except that it is like a rampart against the routine and groaning afflictions of the school day. You wear that jacket, like so much armor, game days, the flipping skirts. Who could touch you? Nobody." 
Later, she reflects on the newcomer, Coach French, and her impact on the cheerleading squad: 
"I was never one of those masked-faced teenagers, gum lodged in mouth corner, eyes rolling and long sighs. I was never that girl at all. But I knew those girls. And when she came, I watched all their masks peel away. We're all the same under our skins, aren't we? We're all wanting things we don't understand. Things we can't even name. The yearning so deep, like pinions over our hearts."
Abbott effortlessly tosses off these little narrative gems. I can't wait to read more of her work. 

Author's web site: www.meganabbott.com

Wednesday, March 09, 2016

London Transport Bus 213A

Proving once again that you can find just about anything you desire on the internet, someone has created a blog about the London Transport 213 bus route.

The 213
The 213 played a vital role in my adolescence. I rode it regularly during 1966 through 1970.  I was a schoolboy at the time.  From the stop on Coombe Lane, just west of Traps Lane, I could catch a 213A to Kingston or New Malden, depending on my mood. Too young to drive, this was my escape hatch from the safety of home and parents into the rather scary outside world of actual English kids that I couldn't meet at school. The possibilities seemed limitless. But to be truthful, my trips usually ended at the Kingston public library, Bentalls or wandering along New Malden High Street and browsing in Cannings book shop. 

I live in the US now. But in 2003 I returned to England for the first time in over 30 years. To my amazement the bus still ran the much same route. Once more I boarded the good old red 213A omnibus at New Malden train station, headed north to my old neighborhood and then west to Kingston town center. Reliving me childhood, I was. I did the same thing again in 2013. 

I fully recognize that this will make me sound incredibly old to some readers. To them, I say this: watch your back. Beware the passage of time. The years will slip by quicker than you expect. Soon you will find yourself searching for web sites like 213bus... reminiscing about things that happened 40 years ago.... blathering on as I'm doing now....

Friday, January 15, 2016

Go Naked in the World

Go Naked in the World (1961)
With that title, and these actors, this sounds like a joke. But it’s not. 

Link: 

Starring Ernest Borgnine and Gina Lollabrigida. Son of a successful Greek emigrant is torn between the expectations his father has for him and his passionate love affair with a beautiful prostitute.


Monday, January 04, 2016

Bang Bang by Jessie J

Scanning 865 channels of DirecTV for New Year's Eve entertainment, I came upon pop singer Jessie J performing her smash hit Bang Bang. "Bang bang into the room/Bang bang all over you," she crooned. What exactly does that mean? 

At first I thought it meant that Jessie J planned to walk into the room and spill something  all over me. Perhaps she wants to throw a glass of champagne in my face. After all, it's New Year's Eve. But this doesn't explain the "bang bang" phrase. 

Another interpretation: she's saying "bang bang" happened and it's all because of me. But I quickly rejected this notion when I heard the next verse: "Bang bang there goes your heart/Bang in the seat of my car." Ah, now I understand. Compelling thoughts. 

As for the use of "Bang Bang" in the song's title, we find ample precedent in earlier works. To name a few:
  • Bang by Nicole Scherzinger: harmless;
  • Bang Bang by Sonny and Cher; seemed dark and disturbed to me as a child; 
  • Bang Shang a Lang by The Archies: simply dreadful; 
  • Boom Bang a Bang by Lulu: the UK entry in the 1969 Eurovision Song Contest; and 
  • Bang Bang Burlesque: showgirls performed in the Boom Boom Room in the Fontainebleau Hotel in Miami Beach;
Since we've put Boom Boom into the mix, let us not forget:
Bang bang. Boom boom. Now that's entertainment. Happy New Year.

Sunday, November 08, 2015

Obama Rejects Keystone XL Oil Pipeline

Once at full capacity, the Keystone XL oil pipeline  would have delivered over 300 million barrels of Canadian oil to the U.S. annually. That's about 40% of what we import from the Persian Gulf, according to the U.S.Energy Information Administration.  

I am not an Obama-hater. I am not among those who seize on every opportunity to find fault with his decisions. But I have to question his judgment in blocking construction of this project. Personally, I would like to see us reduce our imports from the Persian Gulf by 40%, climate change notwithstanding. I'd like to see the U.S. increase its national security by importing oil (even dirty tar-sands oil) from friendly Canada than from Saudi Arabia. Reminder: Saudi Arabia was the home of most of the September 11 attackers. 

Let's be realistic: Americans aren't going to stop driving their gasoline-powered cars and trucks any time soon. The threat from radical Islamists isn't going to get better for the foreseeable future; perhaps not even in my lifetime. Under those circumstances,  reducing dependence on Middle Eastern oil has to be a bigger concern than climate change -- doesn't it? 

Well, apparently not, if you're the President of the United States. He's placed climate change leadership ahead of our national energy security.  


Link: 
New York Times, Nov. 7, 2015

Thursday, October 01, 2015

In Search of the Lost Chord


The Moody Blues
Deram SML 711 UK
1968

Spurred on by a lousy treatment in this Wikipedia article, I offer my interpretation of the lyrics of "The Actor," my favorite tune on The Moody Blues’ 1968 release In Search of The Lost Chord.
In Search of the Lost Chord

To my mind, “The Actor” (written by progressive rock heartthrob Justin Hayward) is probably a breakup song. The narrator sees himself as an actor in his own life. All the world's a stage, as old Bill Shakespeare once said. All the men and women merely players (As You Like It, II vii). As "the curtain rises on the scene” described in the first verse, someone is shouting to be free. That suggests separation. Perhaps he's leaving a lover, or a lover is leaving him.

Note the cadence in the first verse:
The curtain rises on the scene
With someone shouting to be free
The play unfolds before my eyes
There stands the actor who is me. 


A pleasing rhythm, but was it intentional? It doesn’t do to over-analyze these things, but my more experienced ear does hear things that weren’t apparent in 1968.

After this fine beginning, the second verse, "The sleeping hours take us far," is a bit obtuse. (In fact, the whole song is obtuse.)  If you accept my interpretation up to this point (and admittedly it is speculative), the second verse may be telling us that after their "scene" is over, the lovers sleep. They escape from this sad world, dreaming of traffic, telephones and fields until the alarm clock wakes them up.  Sleep knits up the ravell’d sleeve of care, as it were (Macbeth, II i).

The poignant third and fourth verses provide more support for our theme of love gone bad. They happen to be my favorite:

It's such a rainy afternoon

No point in going anywhere

The sounds just drift across my room

I wish this feeling I could share 

It's such a rainy afternoon
She sits and gazes from her window
Her mind tries to recall his face
The feeling deep inside her grows


It seems some time has passed. I have always pictured the narrator and his former lover in the aftermath of their breakup, sitting in separate houses across town from one another, gazing out at the rain. He's unhappy. She’s thinking about some man -- but who? The analysis gets complicated here because she's thinking about "his" face, a man referred to in the third person, but the narrator refers to himself in the first person. 

The chorus and yearning tone of the entire song fit perfectly with my broken love affair hypothesis. Always the romantic of the Moodys, it's no wonder Hayward connected with his female audience. 

Of course, it doesn’t do to over-explicate rock lyrics, particularly with this band. Some words may have been chosen merely to carry the melody and make the song an acceptable length. Some will chuckle at this post (if anyone reads it at all). And I suppose I deserve it, having spilled all this ink. Here I sit, all these years later, dissecting Moody Blues lyrics.  Still, 47 years ago, this album was very important to me. It was the first “psychedelic” record I ever owned – such a contrast to the cheaply produced, shallow tunes which dominated pop music charts of that era. The emotions expressed in “The Actor” fit perfectly with the teenage angst which consumed me at age 16. Back then, I listened to it alone in my bedroom thinking "Yeah, that's right, we're all actors, pretending and faking our way through life."  Even pretending to be in love, perhaps. I assumed that the phrase "the only truth we know comes so easily" was a reference to having casual sex. I was very young.

Whatever the meaning, it's a great song – the best on the album, in my view, with a haunting melody, wistful mood and soft flute and guitar passages that delighted mellowed-out listeners in the late 1960s. Especially the actor who is me. 


--Afterword--
This is the 100th post in this blog. Call me The Centurion.

Monday, August 31, 2015

Barron’s Buffett Barometer

Today we launch our new proprietary stock picking system: Barron’s Buffett Barometer, or B-Cubed (B3 for ease of reference). At its heart is one simple statistic: the number of times per week Warren Buffett, or Berkshire Hathaway, is mentioned in Barron’s magazine. We adjust that metric with several secret algorithms developed by the author of this blog. When the adjusted number shows a favorable trend (or "flashes green," as David Einhorn would say), we blindly follow Buffett’s stock purchases as reported to the entire world in the pages of Barron’s.

With The Sage of Omaha on our side, we cannot fail. Armed with this potent stock selection tool, we will beat the market. Stock exchanges will shudder as we  unleash this radical new investment approach upon the world. Billionaire portfolio managers will sit scowling and muttering impotently amidst the smoking ruins of their hedge funds, unable to understand what happened. High-frequency traders and dark pool aficionados will simply surrender the field and find new careers. 
 Some will say our system has no merit, that this information is available to everyone. They would have you believe the stock market is efficient. Nothing could be further from the truth. Our algorithms are proprietary, top-secret and have been back-tested exhaustively. When back-testing shows that the equations don't work, we modify them. As a result, we now have a forecasting system that accurately predicts what has already happened. 

Even more importantly, we have a subscription to Barron's. It arrives in our driveway every Sunday. Clad in our pyjamas, we retrieve it immediately. The market is closed on Sunday, but when it opens on Monday morning, we go into action. Unless there's something good on TV. Or we're feeling tired and decide to sleep late. There's always next week. 

Sunday, August 30, 2015

Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway and Barron's

I am weary of reading about Warren Buffett in Barron’s. This week the magazine mentioned him twice. A couple of weeks ago, his company Berkshire Hathaway earned four mentions in the same magazine. And last month, Barron’s cover story was “Berkshire Hathaway’s Bright Future.”
That magazine’s writers love to link their stories to his hallowed name at every opportunity. It must be an editorial tactic: mention Buffett, or Berkshire Hathaway, and it casts a warm golden glow over the entire article. Perhaps it’s a way to comfort readers and sell more copies of the magazine, but this has gone too far.
To see for yourself, watch Barron’s weekly index of companies. Count how many times Berkshire Hathaway’s name appears. Read each of those references. Repeat this process for a few weeks, and you’ll probably agree with me: sometimes their reasons for invoking Saint Warren are just too flimsy.
A few examples from this week’s issue: in “Up From the Bottom,” Andrew Bary wants to make the point that IBM’s valuation is among the lowest in the tech sector. But he first tells us that “Warren Buffett doesn’t often make mistakes,” going on to say he bought the stock two years ago at about $160. Today it’s around $148. Is Bary telling us that if Buffett bought IBM at $160 two years ago, and it’s lower now, it must be an even better value today? That’s very questionable reasoning. Many things change in two years. What about IBM’s fundamentals? The fact that Buffett bought IBM stock in 2012 is almost meaningless without an understanding of the company’s performance, markets, strategy and outlook. You’ll find none of that in Bary’s column, but by God, he hitched his story to a star.
Even more irritating is Randall Forsyth in “Up & DownWall Street.” He wants to tell us about the experience of bond fund manager Dan Fuss. But before he does that, he finds it necessary to style Fuss “The Buffett of Bonds, even though he’s a few years younger than the legendary value investor at the helm of Berkshire Hathaway…” Readers get absolutely nothing out of that gratuitous cross-reference. The rest of the paragraph is all about Fuss’ exposure to foreign currency bonds. There’s nothing else about Buffett or Berkshire in the entire column. 
God help anyone using this sort of information to pick investments. They’d be better off with a good low-cost index fund. 

Monday, August 10, 2015

Judge Parker

To: The Editor 
Las Vegas Review-Journal 

 Sir: 

I wish your comics page included my favorite features: Rex Morgan M.D. and Judge Parker. These beloved characters are authority figures. Personifying the Jungian archetype of The Wise Old Man, their adventures gently teach us important lessons about life, love and happiness. 
Rex Morgan, M.D.

We need these authoritative voices in our lives. Stabilizing us. Guiding us. Driving us mad with their pompous moralizing. For evidence, look no further than one of the most enduring characters in the long-running TV soap opera As The World Turns: grandfatherly old Judge Lowell. That man was an authority figure, a Wise Old Man. 

For gender balance, we also need a Wise Old Woman. You might consider Mary WorthThis strip offers us a double dose of sagacity and sound judgment, as it contains both a Wise Old Woman (Mary herself) and her learned neighbor Professor Ian Cameron. Professors symbolize wisdom and maturity. Therefore, let us also have the Apartment 3-G comic strip, which includes kindly old Professor Aristotle Papagoras. 

I realize that these proposals entail a wholesale restructuring of your comics section, potentially wrecking the lives of those who enjoy current offerings such as Get Fuzzy, Argyle Sweater, Poot Tweet and other tedious fare. But I believe that concern is balanced by the soothing presence of comic strip doctors, judges, professors and grandfathers. They fulfill a profound human need for a strong anchor in turbulent times.

Friday, July 10, 2015

Power to the People

I blanched when I read this quote from journalist David Roberts, which appeared in Bill McKibben's Power to the People: Why the Rise of Green Energy Makes Utility Companies Nervous (The New Yorker, June 29, 2015). Referring to the electric utility industry, Roberts states:
“If you’re in a business where the customer is the public-utility commission, and after that your profits are locked in by law, it’s the sleepiest business sector there is, if you could even call it a business sector. They build power plants, sit back, and the money comes in....”

This article contains several regrettable misconceptions which I'd like to correct.  

First: electric utilities' profits are not locked in by law. True, regulators set the rates customers pay. But it's up to management to control costs and deliver the returns required by investors. Costs can and do skyrocket and erode profits if the utility isn't well-managed. 

Roberts also believes that "the entire [electric utility] realm is protected  by a huge force field of boringness." That is a shockingly naive statement. The risks associated with doing business in this industry increased dramatically when merchant power producers were first allowed to build and own power plants, competitive energy markets such as PJM were formed and retail customers gained the right to shop around for their energy provider.  In the wake of that industry restructuring, we saw bankruptcies at TXU/Energy Futures Holdings and Pacific Gas & Electric. Other utilities, such as Reliant Resources, narrowly avoided bankruptcy. Still others had to cut their dividends. 

These gut-wrenching events happened decades ago, but the story doesn't end there. More recently, natural gas fracking has transformed the economics of generating electricity.  Together with climate change-driven environmental regulations, this has forced utility executives to shut down large coal-fired power plants which used to be among the most efficient in the country. 

Meanwhile, rooftop solar generation panels are popping up like mushrooms in residential communities in sunny states such as Arizona, California and Nevada.   

I don't call that "boring," as Roberts and McKibben would have it. Utility executives have had to grapple with these challenges while trying to balance the competing desires of environmentalists, consumer advocates, elected officials, regulators, investors.. and customers, who rightly expect electricity to be available on demand at the touch of a button. 

It takes quite a few years to learn how to effectively run a large, publicly traded business that bears these risks. Perhaps that is why there are no 30-year-old CEOs in the utility business, as McKibben's article delights in pointing out. 

I urge readers of McKibben's article to skim through the articles listed below. They may change your mind, or at least bring a better perspective to the challenges faced by the utility industry.  

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Hidden Hoard of Hazelnuts

Life became more difficult recently when a phrase from an old British TV advertisement popped into my mind, interrupting my train of thought and ruining my day.

The phrase: "hidden hoard of hazelnuts." It was a pitch for an English candy bar, making the rounds on ITV in the last 1960s. But which candy bar?  Not Bounty; not Milky Bar, Cadbury's Flake, or Fry's Crunchie. From out of the past this question haunts me. 

Readers of this blog (if are there any) know, or should know, that my interest in hoards is limited to coins, treasure, pirate gold and the like. But this hidden hoard of hazelnuts thing is a horse of a different color. I have searched here (UK Television Ads, 1955 - 1990) and here (CTVA UK - TV), and elsewhere, all to no avail. I welcome assistance from all quarters in untangling this mystery.



Monday, June 08, 2015

The Reading Hoard

Archaeologists recently found about 300 Roman coins buried on the grounds of a school in Reading, England. These intrepid explorers came upon the hoard while inspecting the area in advance of a construction project. Buried in a pottery urn, they were. 


This find would have been much more interesting had it been made by daring schoolboys, sneaking out in the dead of night to dig holes all over the school property. Were there no school legends of buried treasure on the property, guarded by spiders and grinning skeletons? My own school had such tales. Older boys whispered of a Playboy magazine and a pack of cigarettes hidden in a paint can in our school basement. I actually searched for them.    




Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Man Finds Hidden Treasure

This hoard was concealed in a secret compartment in a chest of drawers. How long had the treasure been hidden there? That's anyone's guess, but the dresser itself is thought to date to 1890. The lucky guy bought it for $100 at an estate sale.  

Texas Man Finds Treasure Hidden in Chest
Good Morning America, May 12, 2015

Sunday, May 03, 2015

Abandoned Station on London Underground

The Londonist reports that the long-abandoned Down Street Underground station may reopen, if it can be converted to some new public use. Built in 1907, it has been closed for some 80 years. Yet it's still down there (pun intended), dark and empty, a ghost station on the Piccadilly Line. 

From a passing train you may catch a glimpse of it between Green Park and Hyde Park Corner. But that won't be easy. The platforms were disguised during the Second World War, when the old station was an underground hideout for War Office workers. Read more about that here.
Down Street station, street level


Stairs down to platform
There are many such abandoned stations. It's a subject avidly followed by a well-developed subculture of enthusiasts. What accounts for such deep interest in this obscure subject? I believe it is the seductive attraction  of... hidden mysteries. They are right there beneath our feet, like abandoned mines or the underground stream central to the bizarre speculations of  The Holy Blood and The Holy Grail, a 1982 treatise on a hypothetical link between Jesus, the Holy Grail, the France's royal Merovingian dynasty and painters of the 16th century.

But don't be distracted by that now-discredited theory. Abandoned Underground stations are real. The long-shuttered Down Street station could return to service in some new form. I hope it does. We need to make use of historical spaces before we throw up yet another dreary modern building.   

Further Reading:
  • Connor, J.E., London's Disused Underground Stations, Capital Transport Publishing; 2nd edition (January 1, 2001), 128 pages, ISBN-10: 185414250X
  • Connor, J.E., Abandoned Stations on London's Underground, Connor & Butler Ltd, 2000, ISBN 0947699309 
  • London's Abandoned Tube Stations: http://www.abandonedstations.org.uk/
  • Urban Ghosts: http://www.urbanghostsmedia.com/2013/11/13-abandoned-stations-disused-platforms-london-underground/
  • Disused Underground Stations (official Transport for London site): https://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/about-tfl/culture-and-heritage/londons-transport-a-history/london-underground/disused-underground-stations

Sunday, April 26, 2015

"Beat Girl" Actress Claire Gordon: Obituary

Alas. Another giant of the film industry has passed on.


Daily Telegraph, April 24, 2015

Our Claire was featured in the beatnik film Beat Girl (1959), in which "hop-head UK school girls get in trouble." Great tag line, that. It starred Christopher Lee and Oliver Reed. Other film triumphs included her appearance with scenery-chewing ham actor Michael Gough in the gorilla-themed horror movie Konga (1961).


Beat Girl Poster (1959)
Beat Girl opening credits on YouTube:


Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Centuries of History Unearthed in Quest to Fix Toilet

Repairing a toilet in this old building in Lecce, Italy, Luciano Faggiano discovered a false floor. Beneath it were underground corridors, a Messapian tomb, a Roman granary, a Franciscan chapel, and many relics. I ask again: why can't something like this happen to me? I am always open to uncovering hidden mysteries. But I simply cannot find them.
 New York Times

Link: 
Home Repair Opens a Portal To Italy's Past
New York Times, April 15, 2015

Friday, April 10, 2015

Natalie Dormer: "Game of Thrones" Beauty Tips

Like most normal males, I don't read beauty tips, no matter who they come from. But in this case, I am happy to make an exception. 

Link:
Want That ‘Game of Thrones’ Glow? Beauty Tips From Natalie Dormer

New York Times, April 8, 2015

Carle Comes Calling by Frankie Carle

Columbia Records Inc. Set C-129. 
Copyright 1947. 4 discs. 78 RPM

This record by pianist Frankie Carle was forever around our house throughout my childhood. It was one of my father’s favorites. And now, after a long search, I’ve bought "Carle Comes Calling" on eBay for under $10. 

This is not the time for an agonizing examination of my motives for acquiring this record. I have a more pressing problem. My turntable doesn’t play 78 RPM records. Accordingly, my new purchase is suitable for display purposes only. 

Track List
(all are "piano solo with rhythm accompaniment")
  • 87315: Star Dust/Canadian Capers
  • 87316: I'll Get By (As Long As I Have You)/Deep Purple
  • 87317: Penthouse Serenade (When We're Alone)/I Want a Girl (Just Like The Girl That Married Dear Old Dad)
  • 87318: Chopin's Polonaise in Boogie/If You Were The Only Girl