The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Immigration

The Politics of Immigration

This is an amazing story of courage and persistence in the face of adversity. Isabel Castillo, an undocumented immigrant who came to the United States with her family when she was six years old and has been a vocal and visible proponent of the DREAM Act, will be presented with an honorary doctorate from the University of San Francisco tomorrow, the 20th of May. There’s only one catch: this Magna Cum Laude graduate of Eastern Mennonite University without a Social Security card could be deported at any moment. [Catholic San Francisco]

The United States is not the only country that deports undocumented immigrants. Mexico commonly deports its fair share of people from Central and South America simply trying to get through the country safely and into the U.S. Yesterday, Mexico detained nearly 500 immigrants in two semi-trucks trying to reach the United States. [CNN]

Check out some incredible musica nueva this week from Brasil, Colombia, México and more on [Alt.Latino]

RPTV: My Home Energy Efficiency Rehab, Part 2 — The Electric Efficiency Boogaloo

Welcome to Part 2 of my filmmaking debut!

Yesterday, RPTV shared with you part 1 of my home energy efficiency audit, which demonstrated why I am the Sy Sperling of energy efficiency.  If you missed it, click here.

As I discussed yesterday,  while many of us would like to take meaningful steps to adjust our lifestyles to help protect the plan; often times, the remedies can be expensive.

With a home energy efficiency rehab, however, your rehab expenses will be paid off by the savings in your utility bills after only a few years; then the savings go directly into your pocket. 

Today, I will share with you part 2 of the energy audit of my house.  In the coming week, films will feature the rehab itself.

If I’ve inspired you to get an energy audit and/or explore an energy efficiency rehab at your own residence, and you live in Kentucky, we have a great new program called KY Home Performance – that I’m using for my own home — which provides low-interest loans or generous rebates to KY citizens.  You can find out more here.

If you live outside of Kentucky, click here for a US Department of Energy site that provides links to programs in all 50 states.

So, here goes, Part 2 of My Home Energy Efficiency Rehab: The Electric Efficiency Boogaloo:

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Fame

The Politics of Fame

Help wanted: major political party seeks candidate to run against President Obama. Send all applications to RNC headquarters with current resume and three professional references. [US News]

“I’ll [most likely NOT] be back.” The end of Arnold. [Politico]

Gingrich campaign raises eyebrows from the get-go: details here. [Washington Post]

THIS JUST IN: Latest polling data shows Huckabee’s exit boosts Romney. [Wall Street Journal]

FINAL TRUMP WATCH: The unbearable lightness of being The Donald. [Forbes]

Artur Davis: Handicapping the Republican Primary

By my count, six Republicans of differing degrees of stature have passed on running for President. Some of the hesitation is rooted in jitters about entering the national stage prematurely (Pence, Thune, maybe Christie, if he is chemically capable of jitters); some of it is based on a cold assessment that Barack Obama plus a billion dollar war-chest is too high a barrier in the fall, and that playing kingpin in the primaries is an appealing enough way to spend the winter and spring of 2012.

As for the remainders–Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich, Tim Pawlenty, and Jon Huntsman seem the most serious and the most plausible, with Mitch Daniels and Sarah Palin still keeping their own counsel. I offer four questions to keep in mind for the growing peanut gallery observing this race:

(1)  Can Romney win a nomination when his signature accomplishment is anathema to his party? In the early part of the last decade, when a centrist record seemed essential to winning general elections, Romney’s stewardship of healthcare reform in Massachusetts seemed ideal pre-positioning for an eventual presidential run. Today, “Romneycare” is why a candidate who just raised 10 million dollars in a day, and who leads in the polls, is still so vulnerable. Roughly 80% of Republicans not only oppose the national legislation that copies major portions of Romney’s work, they loathe it and desperately desire its repeal. Romney’s efforts to explain away the comparison are so far a babble and greater scrutiny of his plan will only make matters worse.

Romney’s hope is that electability, the fact that he alone polls within hailing distance of Obama, will outweigh his albatross. His problem is that in primaries, electability is a vessel for blank slates, not candidates with a freight train of positions. Nor is Bill Clinton ‘s “centrist campaign” in 92 much of a model. Clinton’s defense of the death penalty and his then vague promises to revamp welfare were hardly signature issues that year; in contrast, the fate of Obama’s healthcare law will be front and center, especially in the GOP electorate. The hard reality for Romney: Gerald Ford is the last candidate who won a  nomination with his party opposed to major chunks of his record and that did not end well.

(2) Is there a “silent majority” in the Republican Party? Jon Huntsman and to a degree, Mitch Daniels, think there is and that it is very different from the cultural conservative base that the term was coined to describe. The reason that Huntsman conceives that a social moderate who served in the Obama Administration can win, and the reason that Daniels call for a “truce” on abortion and gay rights, is that in their estimation there is a sleeping center in the Republican Party that distrusts the “culture wars”. There is limited circumstantial evidence for the premise: national polls for the better part of a decade have shown unexpected Republican sympathies for abortion rights and gay rights. But primaries and early caucuses contain more than their share of evangelical leaning conservatives who remain embracing of a traditional moral agenda.

Read the rest of…
Artur Davis: Handicapping the Republican Primary

Tomorrow at The Recovering Politician

Thursday is a big day at The Recovering Politician.

Contributing RP and former U.S. Congressman Artur Davis leads off with an expert’s view of the machinations within the GOP presidential primary field.  Davis makes some incisive observations from the perspective of someone who has run — and won — elections at the federal level.

At lunchtime, tune in to part two of the RP’s Home Energy Efficiency Rehab: The Electric Efficiency Boogaloo.  After this series, and its helpful links to loan and rebate programs available in your area, you will be primed to save your family a whole heap of money.

We also will feature more musings from contributing RP Jeff Smith, who will share his thoughts on the ongoing budget debates in Washington, and specifically, the impact of the departure of Oklahoma’s junior U.S. Senator, Tom Coburn, from the “Gang of Six.”

And of course, much, much more.  All for the low price of…nothing.

See you tomorrow!

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Laughter

The Politics of Laughter

“Where White Man Went Wrong” [picture]

You have probably already seen this, but if not, please enjoy. [The Galactic Empire Times]

Bagels vs. Donuts [comic]

Apparently Purchase College in New York allowed it students to name a newly built dormitory. Would you like to know what they ended up with? Sure you would. [Purchase.edu]

Our own Recovering Politician could make good use of an invention such as this! (Potentially funnier if you have seen him whip out his iPad in person) [picture]

 

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Recovery

After last year’s season of flops, network TV channels plan to strive for fresh, original programming. If they’re realize serious about shows with dinosaurs, fairy tale creatures and large-scale Broadway musical numbers, maybe they’re not kidding. [NY Times]

One of the world’s most controversial industries, coal mining, is trying to become popular with a new demographic: children. [Time]

The touching story of a gripping photo that came to represent the Freedom Riders and the civil rights movement: [CNN]

A Long Beach College professor reports that drinking beer and philosophy may go hand in hand. [Huffington Post]

Slate looks at the declining state of one of America’s fattiest fast food chains, Sbarro. Will baked ziti and pizza the size of your head still have a future in American shopping malls? [Slate]

RPTV: My Home Energy Efficiency Rehab

Inspired perhaps by learning my friend and political cohort, Jeremy Horton, was an accomplished flimmaker, I’ve decided to join the show biz.

Well, not really…

But using my handy and soon-to-be-discontinued Flip Video device, I am sharing with you over the next week a series of short films about an energy efficiency rehab that is going on at my home residence.

Many of us would like to take meaningful steps to adjust our lifestyles to help protect the planet from the growing threat posed by climate change.  Often times, the remedies can be expensive.

But with a home energy efficiency rehab, not only do you do good, but you also do well:  Your rehab expenses will be paid off by the savings in your utility bills after only a few years; then the savings go directly into your pocket.  Additionally, by hiring a rehab firm to do the work on your house, you are helping create green jobs in this new economy.

It is one of those rare win-win-wins.

Today and tomorrow, I will share with you films about the energy audit of my house.  I was surprised to find how much energy inefficiency and leakage there was in my relatively young (13 year) building.  In watching the film, you may identify similar issues at your own house.

If I’ve inspired you to get an energy audit and/or explore an energy efficiency rehab at your own residence, and you live in Kentucky, we have a great new program called KY Home Performance — that I’m using for my own home — which provides low-interest loans or generous rebates to KY citizens.  You can find out more here.

If you live outside of Kentucky, click here for a US Department of Energy site that provides links to programs in all 50 states.

And now, without further ado, here is my filmmaking debut — and find out why I call myself the Sy Sperling of energy efficiency — My KY Home Performance Energy Audit, Part 1:

The Politics of the Diamond: How Baseball Endures

Politics of the Diamond

Sports are  having all kinds of trouble in 2011. You may have heard The NFL is enduring a lockout, that the NBA has one looming.  Baseball, however, seems to be the only sport continuing without some sort of labor debacle–despite the fact that the current collective bargaining agreement (the rules which players and owners agree to) expires in December.  Yes, it seems that baseball will continue, even though the Major Leagues face their own crises.

Although the NBA had a shortened season in 1998-99, the most devastating work stoppage in America’s big 3 sports was the 1994 MLB strike.  (The worst strike of all would be the 2004-05 NHL strike, but that’s a story for another time).  The 1994 baseball season ended abruptly in August that year, and no post-season was held.  People were pissed.  After the strike ended, attendance and TV ratings plummeted.  Baseball was in shambles.  Not until Sammy Sosa, Ken Griffey Jr, and Mark McGuire’s home run races of the late 90s did baseball really recover.  Of course, that solution only created more problems.

All of this is to say that baseball, more than any other sport, realizes the perils of cancelling games, and it makes sense that they are doing what it takes to keep baseball being played.  While football owners seem content to cancel one or even two seasons of football, baseball owners know what happens if that occurs–and its not good.  Hopefully football and basketball won’t have to learn these lessons the hard way.

Not to say that baseball doesn’t have its own problems.  It does–and they are significant.  First of all, people aren’t coming to see baseball at the same rate as they have been.  Whether it is the weather, or the quality of ball being played, or just the behavior of the fans in the stands, people aren’t showing up–and baseball’s leaders don’t seem to care.  This, in my opinion, is a mistake.  This is a problem that is going to have to be addressed–Barry Bonds isn’t walking through that door (because he’s headed to prison).  Furthermore, baseball has two ownership crises with some of its marquee franchises–the New York Mets and the Los Angeles Dodgers.  Although these problems are sure to be solved, they point to some unhealthiness in the league, for sure.

No matter what the problems with baseball, the sport is resilient and defies expectations.  For instance, although it is the only major American sport without a salary cap, it has crowned nine different champions in ten different years–giving it sport’s greatest parity.  And although attendance appears to be waning, baseball still draws more fans than the NFL, NHL, and NBA do combined.  And even though MLB has some seriously draconian video policies, it’s online subscription model is fantastic (seriously, it’s great.  I have MLB.tv, and I love it).   So, while other sports are headed for some real labor struggles this year, baseball steers clear.  Which gives it plenty of time and effort to spend dealing with its other, equally significant, problems.

Jeremy Horton: Rides and Murals, Dairy Bars and Balconies

One

I don’t remember the phone call that changed my life as much as I remember later that night watching my father staring into his coffee cup four months after the funeral, watching my sister watch me, and thinking how soupbeans and apple preserves and cornbread for dinner reminded me of my mother.

Two

The prop car was already on fire by the time I overheard the two redneck brothers we hired as “pyro technicians” arguing about whose job it was to remove the gas tank.  From 100 feet,  I could smell melting vinyl and kerosene, and I wondered if Harold, our cinematographer circling above in a rickety prop plane, would continue to film after we had all blown up.  I hoped he would. It was the last shot of the movie, and we could only afford one shitty 1982 Chevy Monte Carlo to set on fire, so it was now or never.  The morning sky was slate and purple, and I thought about running, really, but I was too tired.

Three

-I’m sorry. Cooper who?

-John Cooper, from the Sundance Film Festival.  People call me Cooper.

-Oh. Okay. Right. Yeah.

– I wanted to call and tell you that we loved 100 Proof.  Thanks for sending the film  to us.  We’d like to have it in the Festival this year.

– Wait. Who is…?  I’m sorry. Do what?

-We would like to have 100 Proof play at the Sundance Film Festival.  It’s in January.  Think you can make it…?

Four

You try to order French fries every hour or so, drink fountain RC and pay for the refills.  Play the jukebox.  When you write in restaurants, you learn ways to pay your freight.  Eventually, people forget you are there.  At the Dairy Bar across the river in Beattyville, KY, they know you as “Donnie and Mayme’s boy from Lexington–down here writing something.”  You sit at the booth, put your watch in your pocket. Wait for the little bird to come sit on your shoulder.  At night, you drive the Booneville road, eat a sandwich, turn into the county roads. Listen to Keith Whitley, maybe Elvis Costello.  You’ve never written a movie; but know the first scene, and the last.  Forget the middle tonight.  It’ll be waiting for you tomorrow.

Five

New York City.  Edie Falco rollerblades into the greek coffeeshop on 6th Avenue. She wants to talk about playing the lead.  The Sopranos were still a few years away, and her agent didn’t want her to come, didn’t want her going to Kentucky for three months (why would you want to go to Kentucky…!?), didn’t want her playing a criminal, or taking a risk with a first-time filmmaker at this point in her career. So, before she even sits down:

– Why would I want to play this woman with no redemption, so little forgiveness.

– I don’t know. Because you can give her some?

– But how far can we take that before people run out of the theater?

We. It was the word “we” that I thought about later.  What date would the Welles/Hayworth, Cassavetes/Rowlands relationship start?  Me, the troubled director­–she, the brilliant actress.  What would our next film be?  Three weeks later, after her agent won out, Edie regretfully said no, but recommended a friend she called the “best smart actress in New York” (Pamela Stewart, and she was so very right).  Edie and I traded letters for a while longer. She always made it a point to mention redemption. She said I should look harder for it, in everything.  I have those letters somewhere.

Six

You don’t think about end credits.  I mean, you really don’t think about end credits until you’re sitting with your producer and going back through every moment of the last two years, trying to remember the Key Grip, or name of the guy you called at 5:30pm on that Tuesday when you needed a dog who could bark on cue.  Extras and bit parts, the caterer who cut you a deal, the Gaffer and the Best Boy, the two redneck pyro guys. “Special Thanks” to include all the people who put up with your bullshit for the last three years.  There’s a deadline, so you walk to the fax machine with the sheets, and you stare at the empty line you left on the bottom of the page.  You take a pencil and scribble in the last credit:  “For my mother, with so much love.”

Seven

Thirty minutes into our premiere, after I’d gone through my checklist of passive aggressive perfectionist asshole questions (Is the sound loud enough? Can you check the focus again? Is the projector bulb new?), Fred Mills, the gentleman manager of the Kentucky Theater, allows me sneak up to the old closed balcony and watch the movie from there.  I stood overhead in the half-dark, studying the sides of faces, waiting to hear that little suck-in of breath when I knew the movie had them; when everyone was invisibly stuck together, taking a ride they weren’t expecting, not thinking about going to the bathroom, or fixing the rain gutters, or the fight they had on the way to the theater.  Six years of my life for those 10 seconds?  You betcha.*

* A month later, Fred tells me that the opening night crowd was total capacity–the first since the theater re-opened after the fire in 1987.  The Kentucky sold more beer that week than ever before, and my friend David from high school fought a guy on Water Street who kept telling his buddies the movie sucked.


Eight

The Final Tally
Budget $220,000
On My Credit Cards $32,000 *
Girlfriends 2
Apartments 3
Friends Lost 1 **
Cars (personal) 2
Cars (burned up) 1
Screenings (US) 500+ ***
Reviews (major papers) 12
Reviews you claim to have not read, but of course you did 12
Times you walked into the Blockbuster on Euclid Ave. to see if your movie was rented 0 ****
Pounds Gained 25
Filthy Oaths 10,251 *****
Years 6
Days 2190
Days (Joy) 2190
Days (Sadness) 2190
Days (Regret) 0
* Estimate–I stopped counting at a certain point
** Más vale solo que mal acompañado
*** Estimate, minus weird travelling tour of Australian outback
****  Ha ha ha ha (right….)
***** Exact number

Nine

She used to come by herself to the theater at night and stand in the back and watch the plays you directed.  She told you stories about your grandfather who painted murals for the WPA, and that he died at age 45 behind the smokehouse where he would sit and sketch crows and fences.  She wanted you to be a lawyer, but when you graduated high school, she bought you a correctable typewriter.  She said, “Do what you want”, and the inflection was softly on the word “you”.  She had colored her hair the day she visited the set, and you told her how good it looked.  Later, after she had gone back home, you realized that it was a wig; that she now had to wear a wig.  Your problems meant nothing.

Read the rest of…
Jeremy Horton: Rides and Murals, Dairy Bars and Balconies

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