Big Screen: Prairie Home Companion.

You do not need to be a fan of Garrison Keillor, or Lake Woebegone, or Prairie Home Companion itself, to like this movie. You do need to be a fan of folky/country music, laid-back often-only-funny-in-very-obscure-ways Midwestern humor and meandering circling back and forth story lines. If you liked “A Mighty Wind”, you will probably like this.

It was poignant, and sweet, and funny, and charming, and I quite enjoyed the movie overall and Meryl Streep in particular. (My mom apparently connected with Lindsay Lohan’s character the most. If you could have heard how my Dad described that to me…PRICELESS.)

Oh and the songs Woody Harrelson and John C. Reilly sing…and their characters in general…what a HOOT!

DVD: Stage Beauty.

I bought this a while ago and never got around to watching it. Which just proves I’m a moron because this is a great movie and I can only hazard a guess that the stars’ extracurricular activities (Billy Crudup and Claire Danes hooking up on this movie and Crudup dumping his 7 months pregnant girlfriend Mary-Louise Parker) kept people from going to it (yes, Jen, I’m thinking of you and assuming that would give you even more pause than the Brangelina situation did over “Mr & Mrs. Smith”).

It’s just beautiful. Heartbreakingly, wrenchingly, poignantly beautiful. How do you find yourself again when all that is YOU has been lost? Ouch.

Crudup is amazing. And there’s a pretty humorous scene where you cannot help but notice (if you haven’t before) how incredibly flatchested Danes is as she has to bare her breast basically “to show she’s a woman” yet when she bares it…well, I’m not sure that proved anything! Ah ha ha ha ha. I used to feel your pain, Claire, 35-some pounds ago…

Netflix: November

I really wanted to see this when it came out last year or whenever but never got to it before it ran away from Chicago. Damn those theaters who don’t keep Indie movies for a decent run! Courtney Cox plays a photographer whose boyfriend gets shot to death in the first scene of the movie…or does he? If you liked Memento or Run Lola Run, films that question the continuity of the space-time continuum, you will probably like this. I loved it. Very intense. And very non-Monica like. 🙂

An Afternoon (and then some) with Leonard Lopate.

6/12 episode: Mark Bowden “Guests of the Ayatollah”

I loved, loved (LOVED) Bowden’s earlier book “Black Hawk Down.” So I knew it could be dangerous listening to this podcast. Indeed it was as I felt the need to swing by the bookstore on the way home and buy the new book despite its hefty size and cost (hardback). Don’t know when I’ll read it because it’s certainly too heavy to carry on the El! Anyway, it’s a flash back to the Iran hostage situation of the….70s? Lots of neat information about Carter and the realities of the situation that obviously people couldn’t see at the time.

Funny quote from the stand-in interviewer: at one point he was saying how it’s always been a Republican criticism of Carter (and the Democrats in general) that they didn’t know how to lead these wars and were just going out into the desert and bungling things. And he followed that with “Increasingly going out to the desert and bungling things is looking more like a bipartisan effort…” INDEED.

6/13 episode: Andy Revkin “The North Pole Was Here”

This guy must be a Republican. A few of the things he had to say made sense. A few were outright wrong. And he made a big point of positioning himself as an alternative to Gore’s “An Inconvenient Truth” film. The thing Revkin doesn’t seem to understand is even IF the effects of climate change are further off than ALL scientists think (again he pretends there are more scientists in disagreement than is reality), NOW is NOT too early to start fixing them. Yes, this is the world we are leaving our children and grandchildren, as he points out, so WHY would we want to WAIT and force them to fix it starting from a worse place than we already are? How is that a feasible answer? Obviously I disagree.

6/15 episode: A Public Defender in the South Bronx:
David Feige “Indefensible”

This was a very interesting interview. But Feige was sometimes too glib for me. Any REASONABLE (non Republican) person can understand the fact that even if someone is a rapist, murderer, etc., does not necessarily stop them from being an interesting, intelligent person that if you were, say, their public defender, you wouldn’t need to HATE and DETEST them despite their crimes. But he constantly answered the question very glibly with “I know this will sound weird to listeners, but…” and never taking a second to actually explain it. His book sounds good, but I couldn’t read it if it was full of that same tone. He has been involved in some interesting alternative approaches to defense/crime intervention and those all sound like quite laudable efforts.

6/21 episode: Anthony Bourdain “The Nasty Bits”

I haven’t tried any of Bourdain’s fiction, it just doesn’t attract me, but I loved both “Kitchen Confidental” and “A Cook’s Tour”. This book sounds just as good. Bourdain is unremittingly unapologetic and is obviously having a great time touring the world and eating all kinds of crazy stuff I would never be able to digest!

6/23 episode: The Future of Human Cloning:
Ian Wilmut “After Dolly”

I don’t have much interest in the topic but Wilmut was pretty intriguing to listen to and not just because of his soft Scottish accent. And isn’t it always humorous to listen to people speak from a scientific view about things which other people can only talk about from a very moralistic and completely nonscientific place?

6/26 episode: Japanese American Soldiers in WWII:
Robert Asahina “Just Americans”

This was an amazing interview, and I’m certainly interested in reading Asahina’s book. I was interested not only because of my inherited obsession with military history (thanks, Dad) and the disenfranchised, but also because Mariko’s dad was put in an interment camp himself! They talk not just about the Japanese Americans in the camp but those who were forcibly (and voluntarily) drafted and their efforts as a unit (they and the African-American unit did some amazing things, particularly on rescue missions, and were two of the most (if not the two most, I forget) decorated units after the war and NOT because of their race, I can guarantee you that).

6/27 episode: From Blockbusters to Bombs: Peter Bart “Boffo!”

You’d think I’d have enjoyed this a bit more, given the movie obsession. It was OK. I did enjoy some of the stuff about things that were supposed to be bombs becoming cult hits and stuff about the money aspect. Studios and their creative accounting will never cease to amaze me. Did you know Tom Cruise will likely make $60 million-$80 million for MI3 and the studio will likely make…NOTHING. He’s got them all fooled clearly as that was not a $60 million performance. Why would they even agree to make his movies, given his back-end deals plus the upfront cost of making them? Idiots. (Not that I didn’t enjoy it, which I did, but great ($60 million-worth) art it was not.)

Warning: Flashback Ahead!

Random ’80s songs (among others) that played during dinner last night at what did not seem to be an incredibly out of date restaurant but clearly based on musical choices was indeed:

Breathe “Hands to Heaven”: Tonight I need your sweet caress, Hold me in the darkness…

Asia “Only Time Will Tell”: Now, sure as the sun will cross the sky, This lie is over, Lost, like the tears that used to tide me over…

Although I could (and did) sing along to every word of each song, I could not name either the artist or the title of either song. It’s Alzheimer’s, I’m telling you.

Common Crossword Clues.

Common to all crosswords:
Med. school class = ANAT
otherwise = ELSE
fencer’s foil = EPEE
Scottish gaelic = ERSE
Ireland = EIRE
PC key = ESC

Particularly common to Chicago Tribune/Red Eye crossword:
lotion additive = ALOE
false god = IDOL
exist = ARE
picnic pests = ANTS
male red deer = HART
agenda topic = ITEM
hymn ending = AMEN
Chanel’s nickname = COCO

Paste Culture Club Overload.

Don’t know why I feel the need to catch up on old podcasts, but that is only one of the many unexplainable quirks, is it not.

4/14 edition: Josh Rouse.
Just saw him perform a few months ago (maybe even in April?). I like the Subtitulo, although not quite as much as Nashville or 1972, and I like it a lot more live. He’s a good interview, makes jokes, etc. – he is also one of not-all-that-many songwriters with good stage banter. I really like the Peter Case spoken word stuff they played during this show as well. Never heard of him before, but may need to check it out.

3/2 edition: Paste Recommends.
I had saved this one up because I knew they played some Johnny Cash and Kris Kristofferson on it. Kinda silly to bother listening at this point four months later, of course, as I already own most of the stuff I like from this show (the new Shawn Mullins and Rhett Miller albums). They also play a new one by a Chicago-band the M’s, that I just barely know, and a Sufjan Stevens song that samples the Copeland/Shaker tune ” ‘Tis a gift to be simple…”

4/28 edition: Erin McKeown.
Great interview with McKeown. She’s a real spitfire live and at the end of this interview she plays my favorite song off her new album. They also featured the Weepies (I LOVE that album) and Sonya Kitchell (who I’ve been wondering about — they refer to her as “halfway between Norah Jones and Joss Stone”). Also an interesting interview with Wim Wenders and Sam Shepherd about their new movie Don’t Come Knockin’ (their first collaboration since their great flick Paris, Texas 20 years ago…

5/11 edition: They Might Be Giants.
I can’t think about my senior year of college without having “Istanbul was Constantinople / Now it’s Istanbul, not Constantinople…” leap into my head. But I never followed the band after that, although I have a friend who goes to see them all the time and probably has all their albums (hey KP!). But this interview is really interesting, these guys have so much going on. Children’s albums (I bought these for my nephew a few months ago but have yet to hear if they’re enjoyable to listen to), doing jingle awards for people’s answering machines for a radio station, their website has lots of stuff (downloads, etc., doing their own podcast)… Really fun interview to listen to.

In general…
If you want to check out the lineup before deciding to listen to the PCC podcasts, you can go to the website. The first few I listened to I thought the emcee (Josh Jackson) was a little awkward. He’s getting more comfortable and some of them (particularly the Paste Recommends ones which I believe come out monthly) have a few people chatting and sound much more “radio-like”.