Lily Salter's Blog, page 1027

August 7, 2015

Requiem for a club: What we lose when intimate music venues close

Recently, the Cambridge, Massachusetts, live rock institution T.T. the Bear's Place held its final shows: After more than 40 years in business, the cozy Central Square club is calling it a day. Although I moved away from Boston over a decade ago, and plenty of my old music haunts in the city have closed, this news has hit me much harder than I expected. Located right on the same block as the venerable restaurant/concert club the Middle East--and, back when I lived there, just down the block from the subculture haven ManRay--T.T.'s was a place I started going to once I moved to the city for college in the late '90s. Because the club's capacity was 300 (give or take, depending on the night), it drew a healthy mix of up-and-coming bands and underplays alike.

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Published on August 07, 2015 12:52

Watch “Broad City’s” Abbi Jacobson and Ilana Glazer in the best “Lip Sync Battle” yet

"Lip Sync Battle," the Spike show where famous people invite their famous friends to move their lips to various songs while Chrissy Teigen cheers them on, was actually worth tuning into this week! In a much-anticipated appearance from the "Broad City" brain-parents, Abbi Jacobson and Ilana Glazer, we were reminded of how fun the show can be when two genuinely fun people are at the helm of it. In the Thursday performance, Jacobson and Glazer took a quick break from shooting "Broad City's" third season to go head-to-head in two lip-sync rounds. First: performing "The Humpty Dance" and "Hey Ya." Then, for the final round: "And I Am Telling You I’m Not Going” and "It's Raining Men," respectively.

Watch all four full performances courtesy of Spike below:

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Published on August 07, 2015 12:32

Jeb Bush goes full Donald Trump on Obamacare: He’s just as nonsensical as the GOP’s carnival barker

If you’re the type of person who digs it when candidates for president engage in substantive discussions about their policy positions, last night’s Republican primary debate was a disappointing spectacle. Well, truthfully, if you’re that type of person then pretty much all of modern politics is a barren wasteland. But the wildly hyped first GOP debate of the 2016 cycle was especially disappointing, and not just because so much of the back-and-forth was dominated by questions about Donald Trump’s tweets and bankruptcies.

There are plenty of offenders to choose from, but I want to focus on Jeb Bush because, absent Trump, he’s the leading candidate for the nomination and the person who should be under the most pressure to actually spell out what he’d do as president. The core of Jeb’s economic message is that he will create 19 million jobs, and jack up economic growth to four percent annually and keep it there. That’s an aspiration that economists regard as wildly overoptimistic, and no president in the past 35 years has achieved it (the one who came closest was Bill Clinton).

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Published on August 07, 2015 12:30

Your “sincerely held religious beliefs” don’t matter: County clerks must uphold the law and issue same-sex marriage licenses

When you have a public service job, the way it generally works is that you do what the job duties require of you — the job doesn't conform to your ideal description of it. Yet in the aftermath of marriage equality's recent decisive victory, a few people are having a hard time with that concept. People like Kentucky county clerk Kim Davis, who this week filed suit against Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear for not allowing local officials to deny issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

Davis herself is currently being sued over her refusal to do what, if I am not very much mistaken, is her job. In her suit, she alleges, "The Commonwealth of Kentucky, acting through Governor Beshear, has deprived Davis of her religious-conscience rights guaranteed by the United States and Kentucky constitutions and laws, by insisting that Davis issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples contrary to her conscience, based on her sincerely held religious beliefs." She also is also demanding the governor pay any damages that result from the lawsuits against her.

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Published on August 07, 2015 12:13

The sound & fury of the GOP debate: A candidate-by-candidate breakdown of its weirdest & most idiotic moments

Last night I poured myself a generous cocktail and watched the Fox News debate. It was, as expected, an orgy of stupidity. Almost nothing of substance was said by any of the candidates. The whole spectacle was a cringe-inducing snapshot of American politics today.

Everyone involved in the broadcast was complicit in the idiocy. The moderators set the tone with their inane questions and refusal to demand intelligible answers. As best I could tell, their job was to smile and nod affirmatively. (Except when it came to Donald Trump.) The candidates offered no policies, no plans, no ideas – only platitudes and awkwardly delivered snipes. The audience did their part, too. Every fatuous remark was applauded rapturously and without thought. No one, it seems, was bothered by the non-answers. Perhaps the most depressing part was the makeup of the crowd, which was about as diverse as a U2 concert. The shimmering sea of whiteness was, if nothing else, a reminder of what diversity looks like in the Republican Party.

At any rate, if you were fortunate enough to miss the debate, here are my takeaways for each candidate. No attempt was made to organize or make sense of these observations. They were recorded in real time and are as incoherent as the sources.

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Published on August 07, 2015 11:05

Rubbernecking the “True Detective” wreck: Can HBO salvage the season in Sunday’s finale?

Chances are, the team behind “True Detective” is not in the position it was hoping to be at this point in the season. With the finale to season two airing Sunday, and viewership dropping, a sense of disappointment and embarrassment has spread around the show despite the many good things in it. If you are HBO or showrunner Nic Pizzolatto, you probably want millions of curious viewers to be pondering just how its numerous strands of plot will resolve.

The finale of the first season hit 3.5 million viewers, a high for the series and up about 50 percent from the first episode. Season two, by contrast, has been slumping as the season goes on: Viewership is down to 2.18 million. (Okay, it’s holding its audience better than “I Am Cait” is.)

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Published on August 07, 2015 11:03

Fox News’ vicious Republican power grab: Why Megyn Kelly vs. Donald Trump was just the beginning

Donald Trump may, in most respects, be a pestilential blight on our world, but there is one undeniably helpful service that he provides: his Twitter feed. Anyone looking for a real-time bulletin of Trump's insecurities, ill-considered opinions and ever-shifting roster of arch-nemeses need do nothing more than head to @realDonaldTrump.

The best part of the feed is when Trump decides that he has a new enemy who needs to be taken down. He is refreshingly forthright about who has gotten under his skin lately, even though the targets change constantly. So it was easy to figure out who Trump felt had wronged him on Thursday night, when he headlined the first Republican presidential debate of the 2016 campaign.

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Published on August 07, 2015 11:02

Judge refuses to throw out fired professor Steven Salaita’s case against University of Illinois-UC

A federal judge has just ruled against the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, which had sought to have Steven Salaita’s case against it tossed out. At the same time, the chancellor who had fired Salaita, Phyllis Wise, has just resigned.

Salaita was the professor whose often acerbic and biting tweets critical of the state of Israel, particularly during its bloody attack on Gaza last summer, led to his being fired from his position at UIUC.  His dismissal immediately led to worldwide outrage--thousands signed a petition demanding his reinstatement, and thousands, including Cornel West and Angela Davis, honored a boycott of the university.  A  dozen prestigious academic organizations wrote letters of protest.

What is at stake are issues of academic freedom, free speech, faculty governance. But also, and tremendously important, is the issue of donor interference in faculty governance.  Salaita has sued for the emails that were exchanged between the university and wealthy donors regarding his dismissal.

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Published on August 07, 2015 11:00

The big loser in last night’s GOP debates: Our warming planet

Last night's Republican debates made for entertaining television but pretty thin gruel for those waiting for some nice, wild climate claims to counter. Seth Borenstein was able to take the night off, and Bill McKibben enjoyed a sarcastic slow clap.

Spent the last two hours watching GOP debate to factcheck on science, climate & environment issues. Nothing said, nothing to do.

— seth borenstein (@borenbears) August 7, 2015

Glad to see climate change a key theme of tonight's #gopdebate. We may differ on solutions, but at least we're all focused on the crisis! — Bill McKibben (@billmckibben) August 7, 2015

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Published on August 07, 2015 10:50

Twitter won the GOP debate: A fitting tribute to Jon Stewart, who made citizen-satirists of us all

Planned or not, the synergy of the first GOP debates and the last episode of Jon Stewart as host of “The Daily Show” was bound to create a sense of loss. The final episode aired after the debates, but it was taped before.  So fans assumed that, even though they were going to have a last glimpse of Stewart as host, they weren’t going to benefit from his reaction to the two-ring circus.  But then, as we switched channels from Fox News to Comedy Central, we were given a moment of hope: Stewart started the show by telling us that he felt “an obligation to devote the entirety of the last show to our standard post-debate full team coverage.”  Yes, we thought, Stewart isn’t abandoning us after all.

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Published on August 07, 2015 10:26