I haven't developed the taste myself yet, but I know a few of you (mike, steve, ect...) will be pleased to find
The Captain Beefheart Radar Station, where you can download a variety of rare live video's and MP3's. Someone with more knowledge should comment on whether this is really the good stuff.
Anybody notice our pal Jeff Lazar in the Village Voice's
Mad on the Street feature? (scroll down) Personally, it's not the going back to school that I miss, it's the two month vacation beforehand.
Drinks tonight. 5:30. The Local (on Ludlow.) Be there or be [].
Here's a gallery of burning man photos. We should get something together for next year. (via
robotwisdom)
One more thing about my vacation: I ate a lot of lame food. My sister had her kids (9 year old Martin was only interested in onion rings, and only in the Burger King style) so we mostly ate at mid-priced "family" restaurants, which my Dad, who's pretty much given up cooking, also frequents. You always hear how overweight Americans are, but in NY you don't see it so much, at least not in our fashionable Manhattan haunts. The Midwest is making up for us. Everything was overdone and overblown. I call it big food, sort of like big hair: everything seems inflated; larger than life. It turns out that there is nothing that cannot be fried, not to mention covered with melted cheese. What really got to me, though, was the incredible amount of food that was wasted. Between the kids and the seniors, it seemed like most of the food went uneaten, and it wasn't like there were more sensible menu options. They kept offering us doggy bags, but it generally seemed like a bad idea. They would only be thrown out a week later, after the grease had eaten through the Styrofoam containers. There was already enough of that going on in the refrigerator. Maybe it's worse that a lot of people actually do finish those enormous portions, hamburgers the sized of grapefruits, french fries the size (and nutritional equivalent) of sticks of butter. No wonder people get mad if they have to park more than 10 feet from the restaurant door. It made me appreciate the range and quality of food available here, not to mention the talents of some of the amateur chefs among us.
Cam had this useful link to the
air traffic control system command center where you can check the delay status of flights at any airport in the country.
Summer is a sort of Ocean, but not boundless.
A bit of melancholy infects its further shore.
We would rather not return to the workaday,
but there is nowhere to remain.
Only a vagueness that grows chill.
Boy if that doesn't sum it up way beyond my ability to do so. Cheers to Mr. Wilson. I say cheers because I am taking the Wheel's advice concerning my precious sample of cask # 14240, a taste everyday, and what a taste.
And I truly wish I could not relate to you concerning the failing health of your father, but I can, and the eloquence of your grief should not be dismissed as "sophistry." You honor him.
this is a note i sent to all at our wine company "APB for great food***
i have been eating here almost since they opened (less than 1 year)
and the wine list really really needs help (drink the one riesling)***
finally last night i had to tell them and i/us may try to help
but the food has been and continue's to REALLY ROCK***
KORI 253 Church***
maybe its dont care about the wine
drink the one riesling maybe the beer
have the plum wine with the recent new dessert chef's treats***
for me KORI and WALLSE are my two best of 2000 so far***
peace"
Jim Marybeth and I had lots of good food in Cape Cod (on our first annual visit to the mom's) but the best meal (go starving) was in Providence RI at
Empire 123 Empire St. #401-621-7911 in the new up and coming downtown...
"Harry Potter: Millennial Child" w/ Eugene Schwartz at the
Open Center 12/1/00
Bayard's old review from
previous chef will be expensive and new chef is even better i hear....check out thier web site might have to call and get the
pearl room
Here's a familiar looking group blog about food. And
here's a strange one about not eating food. "You can eat if you want to; that's your prerogative... I used to play that game... I know what it's like... But I'm
just not interested in it any more..."
Writing a little script to parse the access logs. Here's some stuff I found out.
People have recently followed links from these pages to Dave's page:
From a side list of links:
http://stommel.tamu.edu/~baum/ethel/blogger.html
http://www.drmenlo.com/home.html
http://unxmaal.com/
http://www.misterpants.com/start/index.html
http://www.nwlink.com/~rxg/piffle.html
Nice comment in the blog itself:
http://www.freakytrigger.com/caotm.html
And I'm very pleased to find Mr. Wilson's Arboretum favorably mentioned on:
http://www.groksoup.com/site/Texting/ (august 17 entry)
[update: I just saw that we were noted as one of Chrisitine Vachon's links in an
interview on contentville.com. I'm going to have to give Rachael's page the points on that one.]
Sitting here at Bill's in Jersey City, as meteorologist, looking at lower Manhattan, looks like rain to me. Take cover people.
I liked Dave's Survivor thinking (Rich won == G.W.Bush will win,) although I tried to parrot this and people weren't buying. Anyway, I only saw a small bit of 2 shows, but
this thread (keep clicking 'next in thread') seems full of info from people much more knowledgable than me. Maybe too knowledgeable?
Thanks for the
baseball tip Dave. It's even more interesting than I thought it would be (1953 style next inning.) Did they say how they are doing it? Probably its something like the on-the-fly video morphing stuff they use to insert the mph and such (wheel linked to a story on it last week.) Like filters in photoshop, but running real time at 30fps. Cool. I often want to comment on your posts, maybe we could make a discussion page somewhere here that you could link to just for comments from your blogger page.
saving grace - funny british film about a small town (c0rnwall) widow growing (a huge amount of) pot to pay off her husband's debts. worth seeing, if somewhat silly - great corn flakes scene after two local ladies have a tea party (-lb)
a flood destroyed the crops of my favorite organic team at the Green Market but still plenty to choise from. bought 3 kinds of tomatoes and two types of corn and cranbery beans....
?????---
NEUROMEDICA - Shulgin Bibliography
... compounds. [ HOME | INTRODUCTION | CHEMISTRY | PHARMACOLOGY | PEOPLE | LINKS ] Publications - Dr.
Alexander T. Shulgin, PhD.
This must be part of the jodi.org conspiracy.
new beatles album out soon i hear--will it be #1 selling album (thriller mike jackson / 40 million) of all time??
Neil Young : 08-17-2000, Jones Beach Amphitheater, Wantagh, New York w/ The Music In Head Band
1.Motorcycle Mama--Comes a Time '78
2.Powderfinger--Rust Never Sleeps '79
3.Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere--Everybody Knows... '69
4.I Believe In You--After the Goldrush '70
5.Unknown Legend--Harvest Moon '92
6.Dance, Dance, Dance--Crazy Horse's Crazy Horse '71
7.Buffalo Springfield Again--Silver and Gold '00
8.Razor Love--Silver and Gold '00
9.From Hank To Hendrix--Harvest Moon '92
10.Daddy Went Walkin' --Silver and Gold '00
11.Peace Of Mind--Comes a Time '78
12.Walk On--On the Beach '74
13.Winterlong--Decade '76
14.Bad Fog Of Loneliness
15.Words--Harvest '72
16.Harvest Moon--Harvest Moon '92
17.World On A String--Tonight's the Night '75
18.Tonight's The Night--Tonight's the Night '75
---
19.All Along The Watchtower--Dylan's John Wesley Harding '67,Hendrix's Electric Ladyland '68, Bobfest at Madison Square Garden '93
20.Like A Hurricane--American Stars 'n' Bars '77
---
21.Mellow My Mind--Tonight's the Night '75
Music In Head Tour Band : The Music In Head Band
Neil Young - vocals, guitar, keyboards, harmonica
Donald "Duck" Dunn - bass
Jim Keltner - drums
Ben Keith - Pedal Steel
Spooner Oldham - keyboards
Pegi Young - background vocals
Astrid Young - background vocals
some dude said :
"Terrific show, very interesting setlist, I'm sure you'll agree, lots of stuff from deep in the catalogue, lots of stuff I've never heard in concert before (or, perhaps,
don't remember--how could that happen?), like "Motorcycle Mama," with Astrid and Pegi really belting out accompanying vocals; "Dance, Dance, Dance," which Neil gave to Crazy Horse for their first solo album and which can also be found, my sources tell me, on a '91 Neil bootleg, "Winterlong," an early composition unreleased until the Decade collection; "World on a String" and "Mellow My Mind," not the best-known tunes from Tonight's the Night ; and "Bad Fog of Loneliness," an ancient-sounding psychedelic-pop thing with a country edge that I can find no history for. Pretty much everything had some kind of an edge to it, as you would expect from Mr. Young; even the slowest, mellowest tunes seemed dangerously
unstable. Pretenders opened, and did a couple of the star's songs, kicking off their set
with a sinuous "The Loner" and doing a hard-rock take on "The Needle and the Damage Done." "Brass in
Pocket (I'm Special)" was the encore and the highlight.
i,m sure this was posted discussed etc so sorry if its
old news