Lieberman Lids

That same page on The Hill notes that an entreprenuer is selling yarmulkes emblazoned with “Lieberman 2004.”


For those of you who may be wondering, this isn’t close to inappropriate; yarmulkes — at least, those in casual use; synagogue-wear is a bit more conservative (you should excuse the expression) — have long been fashion accessories. Around New York, it’s not all that unusual to see kids wearing Mets and Knicks logos on their kippot. (I’ve never quite been able to figure out why, but the Mets are the Jewish team, and the Yankees are the Christian team. When a Jewish organization has a baseball outing, it’s usually at Shea; when the Archbishop wants to take in a game, it’s in The Bronx.)


I love the comment from the Lieberman camp:



ãGiven that heâs a senator, an author and now a presidential candidate, Joe Lieberman has no objection to people wearing many different hats,ä said Liebermanâs press secretary.


 

Behind the Scenes With Sharpton

You may have heard that New York’s Biggest Loudmouth, Al Sharpton, is running for president. As a Democrat. Now, while there’s precisely zero chance that I would vote for him or suggest that anyone else should (Tawana Brawley, anyone?), I must say that I’m kind of looking forward to his campaign.


There are two kinds of candidacies. One kind is out to actually win. The other kind is to define issues and simply win a place at the table. No one really believes that the Rev. Al will win a blessed thing, but that’s not the point. Sharpton’s presence will have a revealing influence on the rest of the field’s — and the party’s — attitude toward racial issues. This may not be a good thing for Democrats, as it could well highlight a tendency toward pandering. But to the extent that that tendency does get highlighted, that’ll be a good thing for the electorate, and there’s always the possibility that Sharpton will actually effect positive change.


To be sure that as much light as possible gets thrown on Sharpton’s candidacy, the Hill reports, the documentary filmmaker D.A. Pennebaker (The War Room, Company) will be following the man around for the next year or so. Yes, I’d pay money to watch a Sharpton back room in action.


 

Democrats’ Medical Roll

It used to be that candidates for prominent office might get some discreet plastic surgery or lose a little weight well before campaign time. Doesn’t it seem like the Democratic presidential candidates are going a little overboard?


The AP reports today that Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) will have his prostate removed tomorrow (Wednesday) to cure a “very early, curable” form of cancer. And Sen. Bob Graham (D-FL), who had heart valve replacement surgery on Jan. 31, is out of the hospital, making phone calls, and will apparently announce by March 1 whether he’ll make his run for the White House. (Link courtesy of The Note.)


Almost makes JFK’s Addison’s Disease or Dick Cheney’s heart attacks seem pedestrian, doesn’t it?


 

Using Your Viewers/Readers As Stringers

Dan Gillmore of the San Jose Merc points out an interesting new initiative at the Beeb. Recognizing that the latest generation of cell phones can not only take photos but send them out wirelessly, the BBC has set up a phone number for people to send in pictures of news events they witness — or are part of. The best of them are published at the BBC’s web site, and possibly on the air.


This is a significant change in the news paradigm. When MSNBC went on the air in 1995 or 1996, I buttonholed Andy Lack — then president of MSNBC, later head of NBC News, then NBC, and now Sony Music. I asked him if Microsoft’s involvement in the channel meant there would be any kind of electronic interactivity with viewers. He kind of snorted and wondered aloud why any news organization would want that.


On September 11, I bet he wished he’d had some better way of hearing from viewers in place.


 

Life Begins Again

Pitchers and catchers report today to Spring Training.


It is now safe to read the sports pages again.


 

Dell Dude Busted

The Smoking Gun reports that Benjamin Curtis, the Dell Dude, was arrested last night at the corner of Ludlow and Rivington Streets for possession of a small bag of marijuana.


As TSG wrote, “Dude, you’re gettin’ a cell….”


The site says Curtis is being held on a misdemeanor charge. According to New York penal law, there are two degrees of misdemeanor possession:



  • Fifth degree, which is either smoking a joint in public or holding more than 25 grams, is a class B misdemeanor, punishable by up to 30 days in jail and a fine of $500, and 

  • Fourth degree, which is holding between two and eight ounces, is a class A misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail and a fine of $1,000.

Two ounces of marijuana is not a “small bag” — or so I’m told. So it looks like our boy was locked up for 5th degree possession. TSG says Curtis was kept overnight at Central Booking, pending arraignment.


 

The 9th Circuit May Not Be So Whacko

If you watch the federal courts for any length of time, you may well come to the conclusion that the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals — the district that includes California and most of the Pacific Northwest — is off-the-charts liberal. This is the gang that declared the Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional, backed medical marijuana, and (if I’m not mistaken) has overturned tons of death penalty sentences.


USA Today has a good piece this weekend about the 9th Circuit, arguing that the judges are not so far left as you might think — and that its approach to the law may have more to do with the differences between East and West than Left and Right.


 

Daily Must-Read

Everyone has their daily on-line routine — the dozen or so websites that you check out of interest or habit. You should add one more, because 2004 gets closer every day.


By mid-morning every weekday, ABC News’ Political Unit puts together something called The Note. It culls the best of Big Media’s political reporting for the day and distills it into a zeitgeist. (It’s so hard to find a good distilled zeitgeist these days. Most liquor stores hardly keep it in stock.) More than a “who’s up/who’s down,” The Note details who says who’s up and who’s down — and puts the lie to the notion that Big Media walks in lockstep while simultaneously illustrating how it picks a direction to drift in. They’d probably hate the description, but it’s a hell of a weblog.


Hard as it may be to believe, George W. Bush is up for re-election in only 640 days and people are already choosing up sides. If you want to know who, why and how, read The Note.


 

Water Passion on NPR

A few months ago, I got to perform in the New York premiere of The Water Passion after St. Matthew, by the Chinese composer Tan Dun. (If the name sounds familiar, it’s probably because wrote the Oscar-winning soundtrack for Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon.)


One of the other members of the chorus (and a good friend) was Jeff Lunden, a composer and independent producer whose work frequently appears on NPR. Jeff was so moved and impressed by the experience — which indeed pinned the needle on the Coolness meter — that he produced this piece, which aired on NPR this weekend.


 

Well, *This* is Bad News…

From Reuters:



Men who don’t shave every day enjoy less sex and are 70% more likely to suffer a stroke than daily shavers, a new study shows.


A team at Bristol University in England who examined the link between shaving, coronary heart disease and stroke in 2,438 middle-aged Welsh men found that men who did not shave every day were also more likely to suffer a heart attack.