I live in Omaha . . .
. . . because it's photogenic.
GEEZ. Where's Chris Crocker when you need him?Was Bob Dylan looking for the home where Bruce Springsteen wrote "Born to Run" in 1974 when he was detained by police near the Jersey shore last month?
The 68-year-old music legend was picked up one Thursday last month by a 24-year-old cop who failed to recognize him as he walked the streets of Long Branch, N.J. in the pouring rain.
It may have been as simple as it appears: Dylan told police he was talking a walk and looking at a home for sale.
But the area where Dylan was picked up was just a couple blocks from the beachside bungalow where Bruce Springsteen wrote the material for his landmark 1975 album "Born to Run."
In the past nine months, Dylan has visited the childhood homes of Neil Young and John Lennon, in both cases appearing without fanfare and barely identifying himself after he was recognized.
Last November, Winnipeg homeowner John Kiernan told Sun Media's Simon Fuller that Dylan and a friend arrived unannounced in a taxi to his Grosvenor Ave. home, where songwriter Neil Young grew up.
Dylan, Kiernan said, was unshaved and had the brim of his hat pulled down over his head. He asked for a look inside and inquired about Young's bedroom and where he would have played his guitar.
Dylan has shown a deep affinity for the Canadian rocker over the years, most recently in his 2001 song "Highlands." And Young said at a Nashville concert in 2005 that he once lent Dylan one of his most precious musical treasures -- Hank Williams' guitar, for which Young wrote the ballad "This Old Guitar." Both men revere Williams, a country music legend.
In May, Dylan joined a public tour of John Lennon's childhood home, according to the BBC. A spokeswoman for the National Trust, which runs the home as London landmark, said Dylan "took one of our general minibus tours.
"People on the minibus did not recognize him apparently," the spokeswoman told the British news agency. "He could have booked a private tour, but he was happy to go on the bus with everyone else."(snip)
While it remains unclear whether Dylan was looking for Springsteen's old home in this case, and he never mentioned that he was to Buble, the description that the Winnipeg homeowner gave of Dylan when the singer visited Neil Young's home last year was similar Buble's story.
"So these guys were standing at the front of the house about to get back into their taxi,'' Kiernan, the homeowner, said of Dylan and his friend in Canada. "I noticed he was wearing these expensive-looking leather pants tucked inside these world-class boots. Then I studied his face and tried to keep cool."
It was Bob Dylan, who'd grown up just over the U.S./Canadian border, in Hibbing, Minn., Kiernan said.
"When he said, 'Would Neil have looked out this window when he played his guitar?'," said Kiernan, "I realized what a spiritual experience he was having at that moment, knowing that he would have been doing the same thing at the same time in Minnesota.
In the beginning of music -- and recording -- as we know it today, there was Les Paul. That's all you need to know.
Oh . . . and he was a hell of guitar player, too.
Les Paul died Thursday at 94, leaving behind an entire world of music as his legacy. Not bad for your life's work. Not bad at all.
May God rest his soul.
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Although libraries and other services drew strong support, Festersen said he thought the common theme for many average citizens was their opposition to tax increases.IT SEEMS we have a couple of dynamics at work here in the "don't tax you, don't tax me" contingent.
Council members are cool to Suttle's proposed entertainment tax and property tax hike, and they are looking for ways to cut spending further. They are set to vote on the budget Sept. 1.
Suttle and the council face a projected $11 million shortfall next year. The mayor also is trying to close a $12 million revenue gap in the current budget.
The hearing followed weeks of bad news on the city budget: The temporary closing of Florence Library, and cuts in library hours at other branches. Layoffs of 130 civilian employees. The grounding of the police helicopter for the rest of the year. Swimming pools closing early for the season.
Earlier Tuesday, Suttle announced furloughs in the Mayor's Office, saying all members of his staff will take eight unpaid leave days before the end of the year.
(snip)
Doug Kagan, chairman of the Nebraska Taxpayers for Freedom, urged the council to cut spending.
“Don't tell us about sacred cows that cannot be touched. Sacred cows make the best hamburger,” Kagan said.
Florence is part of northeast Omaha, lying within an area bounded by the Missouri River, Redick Avenue, 45th Street and the Washington County line. It includes the Ponca Hills area.SURE YOU ARE. But Doug Kagan would rather you have this really cool $40 estate-sale, flat-screen computer monitor.
The decision to close the library has upset residents of all ages.
Teresa Miller, 20, and her brother Jonas, 15, were checking out story and music CDs when they heard the news Tuesday.
“That's weird to close a library,” Jonas said. “I mean, you need books, right?”
It never occurred to Teresa that her childhood library had a shortage of customers. She said the Florence library probably has fewer visitors because it is smaller than most branches.
“I like the small things,” she said, adding that she's frustrated that she'll have to use more gas to drive to a different branch.
For Craig and Deborah Johnson, a stroll to their public library is a family affair they hate to see end.
As a reporter approached the couple, they already were asking, why Florence?
“Things are going downhill real fast,” said Craig. “A snowball effect.”
Both he and his wife have been laid off from jobs as, respectively, equipment operator and office clerk. Tuesday, the couple walked to the library — their 2-year-old and 6-year-old in tow — to search for employment via library computers. The little ones also signed on to a computer.
The older Johnson children use the library as well, often taking a break to go across the hall to play basketball or participate in some other activity at the Florence recreation center. A senior center also is in the complex that contains the library.
Paying for bus fare to go elsewhere is an expense the Johnsons said they didn't need.
Hartline on Tuesday was at the senior center arranging a volunteer visit. She is a frequent library customer and also stops weekly at the post office a few blocks away.
“It's very upsetting,” said Hartline. “We are just as deserving of community facilities as any other part of Omaha.”
I came upon a child of god
He was walking along the road
And I asked him, where are you going
And this he told me
I'm going on down to Yasgur's farm
I'm going to join in a rock n roll band
I'm going to camp out on the land
I'm going to try an get my soul freeWe are stardust
We are golden
And we've got to get ourselves
Back to the garden-- Joni Mitchell
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I clicked the mouse once to play it on the computer. It worked. Is that touching it?
I told you I clicked the mouse to listen to the show. The Big Show . . . you know, 3 Chords & the Truth. Is that doing it? This is a weird-ass test.
What????? I listened to the flippin' show. Of course I would if I could, because I did. Why wouldn't I think so? Are you an idiot?
My wife. I listen to 3 Chords & the Truth with my wife.
I hope so. We've been married 26 years. What kind of test is this???
I think you're weird. Doesn't everybody listen to 3 Chords & the Truth? Why the hell do you care if I touched it . . . touched it? Does it come on CD? And what do you care who I "touched" the show with?
Freak.
Hughes died of a heart attack during a morning walk in Manhattan, Michelle Bega said. He was in New York to visit family.AND THEN there was this:
A native of Lansing, Mich., who later moved to suburban Chicago and set much of his work there, Hughes rose from ad writer to comedy writer to silver screen champ with his affectionate and idealized portraits of teens, whether the romantic and sexual insecurity of “Sixteen Candles,” or the J.D. Salinger-esque rebellion against conformity in “The Breakfast Club.”
Hughes’ ensemble comedies helped make stars out of Molly Ringwald, Anthony Michael Hall, Ally Sheedy and many other young performers. He also scripted the phenomenally popular “Home Alone,” which made little-known Macaulay Culkin a sensation as the 8-year-old accidentally abandoned by his vacationing family, and wrote or directed such hits as “National Lampoon’s Vacation,” “Pretty in Pink,” “Planes, Trains & Automobiles” and “Uncle Buck.”
A familiar sight from long, long ago has returned to the Plains, and you won't believe who's behind it.
If you step out into your back yard, or if you go for a leisurely stroll along one of Omaha's hiking trails, chances are you'll see this new-old phenomenon. No, it's not cold-blooded Nebraskans stoking the fireplace in the middle of August. And your neighbor Joe -- or your neighbor's neighbor Phil -- isn't grilling tonight, either.
But it just might be that Junior is talking with his friends.
Check the trend report: Facebook is out, smoke signals are in.
Now that adults from 25-34 have flooded the social-networking site and the 35-plus demographic isn't far behind, Facebook has got its "nerd" on. Suddenly, Facebook isn't where teens and college students meet up with, and spy on, their friends and classmates.
Suddenly, Facebook is where the parents are.
And with E-mail having lost it's "cool" long ago and multiple-party texting being a really good way to deplete a bank account quickly, teens are doing it old school. Really old school.
"A year ago, only a few old men still knew how to send smoke signals," said Winston Flaming Owl, a public-affairs specialist for the Lakota nation in South Dakota. "But now there's incredible interest in the old, traditional ways, and it's all young people hungry to learn about our Native American tradition."
Flaming Owl estimated that practitioners of smoke messaging, as far has he knows, has increased 24,000 percent in the last nine months alone.
"It's incredible," he said. "Who would have thought me and my old classmates getting on Facebook would be the thing to save one of our traditions?
"Not only that, but white people, too. If this trend continues, for the first time in the 500 years since the white man has been in the "New World," native peoples will -- well, in at least this one sense -- will have achieved cultural domination over Europeans. This could be the golden age of Native American culture."
It also could be the golden age of Philip Morris, RJR Nabisco and all the other formerly beleaguered purveyors of tobacco products. And the instant worst nightmare of anti-smoking activists.
Omaha police, for example, have noted a tenfold increase in the amount of citations officers are writing for both underage tobacco possession and violation of the state's Indoor Clean Air Act.
"With texting being too expensive for group application and Facebook being really lame now, there has been a massive increase in teen smoking," said Douglas County health chief Dr. Adi Pour. "Smoke signals is how kids communicate now. And, unfortunately, cigarettes are the perfect communication device for a generation who used to post to Facebook to message a friend just across the room."
Pour said the only bright side of the teen-smoking craze -- one she mentioned on reluctantly -- was that the drastic uptick in tobacco-tax collections will avert expected drastic cuts in her department.
"It's been completely off the charts. I'm just sick about it -- I can't even go into the ladies room anymore without choking on teen-agers' cigarette smoke. But at least we'll be able to treat all the indigent elderly emphysema sufferers now. I guess that's something."
But Pour added that if adults don't abandon social-networking sites soon, the future health consequences will be drastic, with a huge increase in emphysema and lung-cancer cases starting about 2035.
I'VE WATCHED this twice now. I can see what they were going for, but . . . no. Does nothing for me.
This is the best the high-priced "talent" at The Washington Freakin' Post could come up with?
What?
Sorry. With which the high-priced "talent" at The Dratted Washington Post could come up.
Trust me on this one: If you're gonna get yourselves in trouble for something like this, make sure it's funny. Now imagine the allegedly lesser lights at (insert local rag here) trying to "do a Milbank" and get his or her own spot on CNN.
Oh, don't get me wrong. The talent is out there to pull it off. Increasingly, however, it doesn't reside in traditional media.
Some of it does, though. And by the time some ink-stained Steve Martin comes up with a killer script and rounds up a killer production crew to shoot it . . . they will send the concept and script into the Newspaper Bureaucracy Dull Machine, and it will emerge as Two Mopes Doing an Impression of Mr. French Reading a Bedtime Story to Mrs. Beasley.
Which is about where newspapers are today -- 1967. Forty-something years out of date and flailing about in a failing bid for relevance.
Ask Dana Milbank.
Earlier in the day, Rep. Anh "Joseph" Cao, R-New Orleans, the only member of the Louisiana House delegation who had not weighed in on where he stands on the health reform bill, said that he cannot support any bill that permits public money to be spent on abortion.LISTEN, LET'S BE BLUNT. Asian intellectuals usually don't go far in majority-black, majority-poorer-than-hell political districts. They really don't go far in New Orleans, a place where everything is about race . . . and grievance.
"At the end of the day if the health care reform bill does not have strong language prohibiting the use of federal funding for abortion, then the bill is really a no-go for me," said Cao, who studied to be a Jesuit priest.
"Being a Jesuit, I very much adhere to the notion of social justice," Cao said. "I do fully understand the need of providing everyone with access to health care, but to me personally, I cannot be privy to a law that will allow the potential of destroying thousands of innocent lives.
"I know that voting against the health care bill will probably be the death of my political career," Cao said, "but I have to live with myself, and I always reflect on the phrase of the New Testament, 'How does it profit a man's life to gain the world but to lose his soul.'"
Cao said he is still undecided about the merits of including a public option in any health reform redesign. On Friday, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee announced that Cao will be one of seven Republican members of Congress targeted with radio ads that will play on radio stations with largely African-American audiences, urging him to support Obama's health reform efforts.
Omaha Moon we heard that
You shined on Cedar Rapids last June.
We’ll thank you to remember that you are a one-town moon;
Don’t forget your name is Omaha Moon.
YIKES! One way or another, this is going to hurt.Mayor Jim Suttle said Friday that Omaha faces an additional $7 million gap in its general fund budget this year. The new problems raise the total 2009 unresolved shortfall to $12 million.
The shortfall has grown mainly because of weak interest earnings, higher-than-expected health care payments for retirees and lower tax collections on gas and water usage, officials said.
“These latest numbers reinforce the depth of the financial crisis and point out the urgency in obtaining wage freezes from the city unions for both 2009 and 2010,” Suttle said.
Omaha has been struggling with its budget because of the weak economy, with revenues falling short of projections. Both Suttle and former Mayor Mike Fahey have scrambled to balance this year's budget, and Suttle also has proposed tax hikes and budget cuts for 2010.
So far this year, Omaha officials have cut $9 million from the budget passed last summer. Until now, they thought the goal was $14 million in cuts. Suttle had hoped to close the $5 million gap by negotiating wage freezes equaling that amount with city employee unions.
Now, even if the unions agree to those concessions, the city still faces a massive hole in its current budget.
“Ouch,” said City Council President Garry Gernandt. “It's the type of news we don't want to hear, now or ever.”
Suttle and his new finance director, Pam Spaccarotella, did not outline what additional cuts they will propose. Suttle pointed out that his proposed 2 percent entertainment tax, if implemented, would take effect Oct. 1 of this year. While the tax is mainly aimed at solving next year's budget problems, Suttle said it also would generate $2 million this year that could be applied to the current shortfall.
Councilman Chuck Sigerson was not swayed by that argument. He remains skeptical of the entertainment tax and said the latest numbers don't change his mind.
“I think we need to be very, very careful before we leap into an entertainment tax,” he said. “We need to let cooler heads prevail. I just won't be railroaded into doing it, just because of the latest emergency.”
Sigerson also said he hoped that the city would gain extra revenue later in the year. For example, he said, the federal “cash for clunkers” program is enticing more people to buy cars, which would boost sales tax revenue for the city.
Gernandt doubted whether the city would be able to start collecting the new entertainment tax by Oct. 1, even if the council did approve it. He said there would be many logistical challenges in implementing the tax.
But Gernandt also said he couldn't immediately say where the city might make enough cuts to balance the budget.
Spaccarotella said the latest projections for the shortfall are based on actual spending for the first half of the year. Earlier estimates were calculated from spending and revenues during the first three months.