Mondauk Common:
Michael-Patrick Harrington's Blog

This Week’s Turntable…

  1. El Camino by the Black Keys (2011)
  2. High Hopes by Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band with Tom Morello (CD/DVD; 2014)
  3. Too Sure by the Dum Dum Girls (2014)
  4. AM by the Arctic Monkeys (2013)
  5. Let Love In by Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds (1994)
  6. Gems by Aerosmith {compilation} (1988)
  7. Bella Donna by Stevie Nicks (1981)
  8. Songs in the Attic by Billy Joel (1981)
  9. Echo and the Bunnymen by Echo and the Bunnymen (1987)
  10. The Ugly People vs. the Beautiful People by the Czars (2002)

 

What are you listening to?

 

Arctic Monkeys, “Do You Wanna Know?”

Way to go, Ellen!

From CNN.Com:

(CNN) — Hollywood actress Ellen Page, known for her role in the movie “Juno,” announced she is gay, in a very public way.

Page broke the news during an emotional speech Friday in a crowded conference hall in Las Vegas, her publicist confirmed to CNN.
“I’m here today because I am gay. And because… maybe I can make a difference,” Page told a crowd at an event called Time to THRIVE, a conference to promote issues of the gay community.
The Canadian star got a standing ovation during the speech.
“I am tired of hiding and I am tired of lying by omission,” Page told the crowd. “I suffered for years, because I was scared to be out.”

Love this…another far right bigot sticks his foot into his mouth…

From the Huffington Post

(Click HERE to watch the video.)

Anti-Gay Restaurant Hilariously Pranked By Gay Rights Supporters
The Huffington Post

We’re willing to bet he didn’t see this one coming.

After Oklahoma restaurant owner Gary James gave an interview to a local news station explaining why he didn’t want to serve gay people, the story went viral.

“I really don’t want gays around,” James told local news station KFOR-TV in a video published Feb. 6. “Any man that would compromise his body would compromise anything.”

Perhaps unsurprisingly, James’ comments rubbed the Internet the wrong way. The restaurant’s Facebook and Yelp pages, which had fewer than 10 reviews each last week, are now packed with hundreds of comments, many of which label Gary’s Chicaros Club as one of the best gay bars in northern Oklahoma.

“Ask for Gayry! He’s faaaaaaabuuuuulouths,” wrote one Yelp reviewer. “Like, I mean, O-M-G-Awethsome!”

“[This is] the best gay bar in Oklahoma!” remarked Faye Galbraith on Facebook. “Although I must say Gary is far from subtle…the way he struts around in his sparkly pink mankini made me a tad uncomfortable.”

Some of the reviews weren’t quite so enthusiastic, however. Alex H. from Kentucky observed that he “thought this place was going to be cheap,” but noted that the “all male review night” forced him “to whip out all [his] singles.”

Yet perhaps the most powerful reviewer opted to be sincere rather than sarcastic.

“As a combat vet who fought for all Americans [sic] freedom, I hope you and your bigoted views change,” Scott from Washington said. “I will never eat a bite of food in this pit you call a restaurant. You are an embarrassment to this land. You are anti American.”

James doesn’t limit his bigotry to homosexuals. He’s been accused of refusing to serve disabled people and has said hateful things about welfare recipients, too. The restaurant’s motto is “Where The Great Whites Gather,” and its signature T-shirts disparage Muslims, blacks and Democrats.

Although Oklahoma protects people from being turned away from businesses for their race, gender or religion, it does not offer that protection for sexual orientation.

The Huffington Post did not immediately hear back from James on Monday.

This Week’s Turntable…

  1. High Hopes by Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band with Tom Morello (1 CD/1 DVD; 2014)
  2. Pure Heroine by Lorde (2013)
  3. AM by the Arctic Monkeys (2013)
  4. Hard Promises by Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers (1981)
  5. Gung Ho by Patti Smith and Her Band (2000)
  6. Crocodiles by Echo & the Bunnymen (1980)
  7. Give the People What They Want by the Kinks (1981)
  8. Pieces of You by Jewel (1994)
  9. Pink Moon by Nick Drake (1972)
  10. The Best of Carly Simon by Carly Simon {compilation} (1975)

 

What are you listening to?

 

The Kinks, “Destroyer” performed on a British TV show (minus Dave Davies!)

 

 

Jewel, “Silver Nickels & Golden Dimes,” a song Howard Stern wrote in the 6th grade, performed live on the Howard Stern Show.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIP43pQqSEA

 

 

Jewel, “Who Will Save Your Soul”

 

 

My NEW book, Sweater Girl and Other Tales of Mondauk County, has been released!

My NEW book, Sweater Girl and Other Tales of Mondauk County, has just been released!

Sweater Girl is my 4th book.
Published by Silk Raven Press. 352 pages. (Much shorter than my last book!)
Incredible cover design by Dominique Messihi of Pepper Lillie .

You can purchase the paperback or the Kindle edition right here. All paperbacks bought from my site will be signed and come with a special bookmark. Plus: the paperback is cheaper on my site!

The paperback & the Kindle edition are also available on Amazon.
Barnes & Noble’s web site carries the paperback.

DESCRIPTION:
Welcome to Mondauk County – Where the Past is Never Past

Sweater Girl and Other Tales of Mondauk County is a collection of novellas and stories that explores the condition of morbid nostalgia: being so bound to the past that it poisons the present and chokes the future.

In the novella “Sweater Girl,” a man combs through the ashes of a teenage party that took place forty years ago, looking for clues to what had transpired, including arson, an amputation, and the death of his father, while obsessing on the party’s catalyst, an enthralling young sweater girl.

Plus…a retired romance novelist faces her fears of intimacy in a most radical fashion…a cult member becomes consumed with an underage girl…a loner signs up for a spelling bee to impress a popular girl on the eve of an assault on the school…as a weary detective hunts the Red Ribbon Killer, a grandmother confronts the secret in her shed…an ex-boxer squares off against a mob capo when his wife disappears…a man finds a radio broadcasting from his past in the abandoned Divine Lorraine Hotel…and after his hand gets stuck to a girl’s hair with paste, a giant of a boy is hunted by a vengeful mob.

4 Sweater_Girl_Design_FINAL_LowRes_1 JUST FRONT - NO SPINE (1)

Good News for Obamacare

From The Rachel Maddow Show:

CBO delivers welcome news to Obamacare backers

By Steve Benen

02/04/14 05:06 PM—UPDATED 02/05/14 01:53 AM

If Republican press releases and reports from conservative and major media outlets are any indication, the Congressional Budget Office’s findings on the Affordable Care Act are simply brutal. National Review, which probably published its report before actually looking at the CBO’s findings, ran this headline: “The CBO Just Nuked Obamacare.”

As we discussed earlier, the coverage has been profoundly misleading. Despite what Americans are being told, the CBO did not find that the health care reform law would cost the nation over 2 million jobs. What it actually said is that the law will empower more than 2 million Americans to leave the workforce if they want to, no longer feeling forced to stay at a job in order to have benefits for them and their family.

Why “Obamacare” critics consider this a bad thing remains unclear.

But Michael Hiltzik, to his credit, took the reporting one step further:
The Congressional Budget Office is out with its latest report on the Affordable Care Act, and here are a few bottom lines:

— The ACA is cheaper than it expected.

— It will “markedly increase” the number of Americans with health insurance.

— The risk-adjustment provisions, which Congressional Republicans want to overturn as a “bailout” of the insurance industry, will actually turn a profit to the U.S. Treasury.

Given all this, why are the first news headlines on the CBO report depicting it as calling Obamacare a job killer?
Because a whole lot of congressional offices issued press statements before getting their facts straight? Because a few too many reporters don’t understand CBO reports as well as they should?

This is one of those strange days in which most of the political world seems to have gotten an important story backwards. The Affordable Care Act’s critics have spent the day eagerly touting a CBO report that offers a whole lot of good news for the Affordable Care Act’s supporters – and much of the media has played along in a depressing display.

Indeed, the CBO’s findings – which, again, are readily available online for all to see – actually add fresh evidence that discredits talking points pushed by the law’s detractors.

For Obamacare critics, the law has increased part-time employment over full-time employment. The CBO found “there is no compelling evidence” to support the argument.

For Obamacare critics, the law will worsen the nation’s finances. The CBO found that the Affordable Care Act will actually reduce the deficit by more than $1 trillion over the next 20 years.

For Obamacare critics, the law will force consumers to pay more for health care. The CBO found that the Affordable Care Act’s premiums are even better than originally projected.

For Obamacare critics, the law will cause the ranks of the uninsured to swell. The CBO found that the Affordable Care Act will bring coverage to 13 million Americans this year and 25 million Americans over the next two decades.

Conservatives who’ve spent the day urging Americans to look at the CBO report have inadvertently encouraged the public to review a document that supports the White House’s arguments.

RIP Phillip Seymour Hoffman

From CNN.Com:

(CNN) — Oscar-winning actor Philip Seymour Hoffman has been found dead of an apparent drug overdose in his Manhattan apartment, law enforcement sources said Sunday.

Police said Hoffman, 46, was found on the bathroom floor and pronounced dead at the scene.

Investigators combing the scene found two bags of what is believed to be heroin inside the fourth-floor apartment, law enforcement officials said.
Philip Seymour Hoffman arrives for the Los Angeles premiere of \’The Hunger Games: Catching Fire\’ at the Nokia Theatre LA Live in Los Angeles, California, on November 18.
Philip Seymour Hoffman arrives for the Los Angeles premiere of ‘The Hunger Games: Catching Fire’ at the Nokia Theatre LA Live in Los Angeles, California, on November 18.
Photos: People we lost in 2014 Photos: People we lost in 2014

Police are investigating to determine whether anyone was with the actor when he died, the officials said.

Hoffman’s body was discovered by a playwright who had been working with him, and a needle was found in one of the actor’s arms, the sources told CNN.

Hoffman won an Academy Award for best actor for the 2005 biopic “Capote.”

He was a beefy 5-foot-10-inch man, but was convincing as the slight 5-foot-3-inch Truman Capote. He had a booming voice like a deity’s but often played shlubby, conflicted characters.

He could be heartfelt and giving, as with his male nurse in “Magnolia” or rock critic in “Almost Famous,” or creepily Machiavellian, like the gamemaster in the latest “Hunger Games” movie or a “Mission: Impossible” movie villain.

He also appeared in “Charlie Wilson’s War,” “Doubt,” and “The Master,” for which he was nominated as best supporting actor.

According to a biography of the actor posted on the Turner Classic Movies website, last year Hoffman revealed he was seeking treatment for drug abuse, and “seemed to be confident that he was getting a handle on the situation.”

Hoffman’s father was a salesman and his mother was a family court judge, the biography says.

He landed his first professional stage role before graduating from high school and went on to study acting at New York University.

In Hollywood, his big break came with a small role as Chris O’Donnell’s classmate in the 1992 film “Scent of a Woman.”

For years, Hoffman was the kind of anonymous character actor who earned critical raves but was often unnoticed by the general public. He used his abilities to take chances with such directors as a then-unknown Paul Thomas Anderson, with whom he worked in “Hard Eight” (and several ensuing films, as both became better known) and Todd Solondz (“Happiness”).

“I think about that a lot,” he told Esquire in 2012 of his anonymity. “I feel it cracking lately, the older I’m getting. I think I’m less anonymous than I was.”

Even after winning the Academy Award, he took challenging roles. He was an L. Ron Hubbard-style leader in “The Master” and an intense theater director in “Synecdoche, New York.” Neither lit up the box office, but Hoffman’s performances earned wide praise for their immersiveness.

Hoffman appeared last month at the Sundance Film Festival, where a movie he starred in, “God’s Pocket,” premiered.

After his Oscar win at the Academy Awards in 2006, Hoffman thanked his mother for taking him to his first play.

“She brought up four kids alone and she deserves a congratulations for that. Ah, we’re at the party, Ma, you know? And she took me to my first play and she stayed up with me and watched the NCAA Final Four, and my passions, her passions became my passions. And, you know, be proud, Mom, because I’m proud of you and we’re here tonight and it’s so good,” he said in his acceptance speech.

Hoffman stayed active on stage even as his star rose in Hollywood. He starred in a Broadway production of “Death of a Salesman” in 2012 and was co-artistic director of the Labyrinth Theater Company in New York.

He is survived by three children and his longtime partner, Mimi O’Donnell.