Tuesday, December 9, 2025
Fall Out Girl
Monday, December 8, 2025
Social Media Disease
I turned my Instagram page into a repository for anti-Trump memes - two posts of anti-Trump memes with every third post a picture of a beautiful woman to provide relief from MAGA. (Instagram pages show posts in rows of three.) I posted pictures in threes twice, sometimes thrice a day at times, because the memes bashing Trump and MAGA were too clever to resist. I was going overboard and spending way too much time on Instagram, but hey, it was fun.
Then two embarrassing things happened. One was that I reposted the original post of a friend who also posts on Instagram - that is, it was an image my had created himself - and he was a tad miffed by my failure to credit him. (I credited Go-Go's rhythm guitarist Jane Wiedlin for reposting memes on her Instagram page that she had likely not created herself, even though I don't know her from Eve, but not my friend. Embarrassing indeed.) The other embarrassing thing was this meme I posted not on Instagram, but on Facebook. And I had found it on BlueSky.
And so I have decided to stop posting anything on Instagram - for the time being. It might be a long time being. Because, after these two faux pas, posting anti-Trump, anti-MAGA memes on Instagram - or anything else - stopped being fun. And I don't think I was enlightening any Republican-leaning voters with my posts.
I'm not big on social media these days. I still go on Facebook and I'm active there because, well, that's still fun. Instagram, Facebook's sister platform, has become a grind. Threads is just boring. And if not for the ability to post links to my blog on LinkedIn, Mastodon, and BlueSky, I wouldn't bother with any of those platforms. (Yes: Meta platforms still won't let me post links to my blog there.) So I'll just wait until I really want to post something on Instagram before I do so again. And with all the time I save not going on platforms not named Facebook, I have more time to write blog posts here.
Not that I will. I need more time to enjoy being with my cats.
Sunday, December 7, 2025
Lou Reed - Metal Machine Music (1975)
Lou Reed's 1975 album Metal Machine Music is a single composition stretched out over four sides of a double album, much like Yes's infamous 1973 release Tales From Topographic Oceans had been. But unlike Yes's album, which at least had real instruments and vocals, Metal Machine Music is a collage of feedback, interference, white noise, and elements of static that recall what would happen when an analog television set was tuned to a channel that local stations didn't broadcast on. You remember the TV-screen image you'd get from that - "snow." Metal Machine Music is a snow job.
Lou Reed seemed to be responding to the modicum of commercial success he'd received with Transformer and "Walk On the Wild Side" by deliberately trying to scare away listeners in places like northern New Jersey and Long Island, two suburban locales that represented everything Reed hated about mainstream America. He overreached. He scared away part of his core fan base, listeners who had been with him since the days of the Velvet Underground. Avant-garde music made with electronic backwashes had been common in the New York underground scene, to be certain, but I doubt no such experimental music has ever been less tuneful, less engaging, and less, well, musical than this.
The best I can say about Metal Machine Music is that listening to it in 2025 beats anything currently on the pop charts, until I realize that some of its worst moments might have inspired rap, a form that relies on computerized and mechanical sounds supporting angry recitations of lyrics about the 'hood. Because, believe it or else, Metal Machine Music, though it did not chart (it may be in competition with Bloodstone's soundtrack album for their movie Train Ride To Hollywood as the worst-selling LP of 1975), created a cult following among fans who explain it as some sort of bold experimentation that was ahead of its time. Not that they have necessarily listened to the album from start to finish; Reed's liner notes explain that it's not meant to be. This of course files in the face of the large-scale compositions the British prog bands of the day were indulging themselves in, which are supposed to be listened to from beginning to end, and perhaps Reed, cynical New Yorker that he was, was parodying art rock the way the Ramones parodied the mainstream rock stars of the day. Except that with Metal Machine Music, Reed parodied himself.
I actually did listen to the whole thing from start to finish. How did I manage that? Simple - it was so awful, I laughed at its awfulness. The are records from lousy bands like Journey, Toto, and Uriah Heep, as well as any Rainbow album with Graham Bonnet on lead vocals, that make you lunge for the "off" switch on your stereo, but Metal Machine Music is not that type of record. The noises are so outrageous, you can't help but laugh - at the sound, at the concept, at the idea the RCA would even put this out. I was tidying up my house while listening to Metal Machine Music. I ran the vacuum cleaner; it was like singing along. In harmony. I was inspired to listen to all of Metal Machine Music because, in their book "The Worst Rock 'n' Roll Records of All Time," Jimmy Guterman and Owen O'Donnell suggested that Bob Ludwig, the album's engineer, is the only person without a history of substance abuse who has listened to all four sides of it. I accepted the challenge. And I prevailed.
Without even a single gummy.
Guterman and O'Donnell also declared Metal Machine Music to be the most unlistenable album ever recorded - including anything from Kenny Rogers. The reference to Rogers was in fact quite appropriate. Metal Machine Music, to describe the album in one sentence, is Lou Reed just dropping in to see what condition his condition was in.
Saturday, December 6, 2025
Megyn Kelly Is a Sadist
Megyn Kelly was always a jerk, ads noted by the pretentious Welsh spelling her parents used for her first name. But recent comments from the inexplicably popular conservative talk show host reveal that she may have a brain worm far worse than what Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. dealt with.
And as if that weren't bad enough, Kelly, talking on her show to fellow discredited media personality Mark Halperin, said she wanted to see the alleged drug dealers on the Venezuelan boats that Donald Trump and Pete Hegseth have been blowing out of the water die slow and painful deaths for a crime they likely did not commit - namely, running drugs.
"So I really do kind of not only want to see them killed in the water," Kelly said to Halperin, "whether they're on the boat or in the water, but I'd really like to see them suffer. I would like Trump and Hegseth to make it last a long time so that they lose a limb and bleed out a little."
Why do I get the feeling that Kelly knows tortures that were banned during the Spanish Inquisition?
I used to think Kelly was just a mean bitch, but even female Rottweilers are kinder and gentler than this bottle-blonde harridan. She is happy to defend pedophilia and try to redefine it to make the late Jeffrey Epstein - and, by association - Donald Trump - look like they're being railroaded (well, she is a attorney), and she's also happy to suggest death-camp justice to Spanish-speaking mariners accused of drug running without even a fair trial or adherence to international law in sentencing the guilty parties. I'm trying to think of a female political commentator on the left who are as mean-spirited and as morally bankrupt as Kelly. Of course, I can't think of any as morally bankrupt as she is. Mean-spiritedness? A couple of ladies on the left, including Jennifer Welch ("We're not fand of the Catholics"), occasionally get close, but once female liberal commentators reach a certain level of viciousness (as when Joy Reid tried to gay-shame Charlie Crist and then denied it despite the evidence), they usually just stary there. Megyn Kelly, like her spiritual benefactor Donald Trump, moves heaven and earth to get progressively worse. If you think this is as bad as Megyn Kelly can get, you don't know Megyn Kelly.
It is for these transgressions of intelligence and taste on her Sirius XM show that has led many Sirius XM subscribers to cancel their subscriptions in protest, as there are no signs that Kelly's days at Sirius XM are numbered. That is a brave thing to do, as Sirius XM has no competition in satellite radio, and so-called terrestrial radio is virtually unlistenable. It is for those reasons - but for the latter reason, especially - that I remain a Sirius XM subscriber despite Kelly's presence on it. Because I don't listen to political commentary on Sirius XM. I subscribe strictly for the music channels, and I listen to it in my car more than I do on my laptop. I consider my car to be my refuge, as I consider music to be a refuge, and so I want to get away from politics when I'm driving. I listen to my favorite rock Sirius XM channels - which play records going back sixty years - while on the road. If I still listened to regular FM radio and tried to find a station that still played music made before Jimmy Carter left the White House, I wouldn't have much luck. And thanks to an oligarchical communications law passed nearly thirty years ago, I'd have to deal with stations owned by politically connected conglomerates such as iHeart Radio, which has done more damage to American radio than payola.
I even listen to the jazz and classical channels on Sirius XM instead of the local public classical and jazz stations on the FM dial, mainly because the reception of these stations is so bad that I get interference on my receiver; the classical station gets cut out by a rock station from Scranton - over a hundred miles from where I live - that broadcasts on the same frequency. And sometimes I like to listen to Sirius XM's contemporary jazz (derided by its detractors as "smooth jazz") channel, Watercolors. I can't listen to the FM contemporary-jazz station in New York because it went off the air seventeen years ago.
It's all good and fine to stop subscribing to Sirius XM to protest Megyn Kelly's presence on it, but such a boycott is highly impractical when FM and AM radio are particularly awful these days and Sirius XM is the only place to go to listen to the sort of music you can't hear on the FM dial anymore and haven't been able to hear on the AM dial since at least the late 1980s. My advice to Sirius XM subscribers is simply not to listen to Megyn Kelly's show rather than quit the service. Sirius XM will likely still get the message that way. Why do you think 50s on 5 and 60s on 6 were moved from channels 5 and 6 to farther down the dial and renamed "50s Gold and "60s Gold"? Because Sirius XM found that it could get many more listeners on its channels at the top of the dial if there were more "current" music stations on channels 5 and 6. And I don't think it was in response to canceled subscriptions. It's because Sirius XM was responding to what its customers liked more as opposed to what they didn't like as much. And sticking it out and ignoring Megyn Kelly could possibly be more effective in not just pushing her show down the dial but getting it canceled entirely than just quitting the whole damn company.
Get that sadistic excuse for a human being out of your mind, tune in to Watercolors, and chill out.
Friday, December 5, 2025
Christmas Music Video Of the Week - December 5, 2025
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
Aftyn The Lovin'
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
War Crimes Against Humanity
I once noted that I thought that the idea of a war crime is a redundancy because all war is a crime. But what happened three months ago today is not only a crime, it would be inexcusable if it were a war exercise. The fact that it was likely perpetrated to provoke a war also makes it a crime.
On September 2, 2025, Secretary of War (or Defense) Pete Hegseth ordered a U.S. Navy strike on a Venezuelan boat that his office says was a drug-running boat bringing fentanyl to American shores. The boat was nowhere near Florida, the northern Gulf Coast, or Texas but in the Caribbean Sea, just north of Venezuela - a long way to bring a bunch of crates full of pills. Two survivors managed to emerge from the explosion, and Hegseth made it clear that both must be taken out. They were.
That way Hegseth can hold . . . his booze.
Hegseth can't drink his way out of this one. He cannot deflect blame for the murder of the two survivors to Admiral Bradley and all the boys back in the drink. The Senate Armed Services Committee, chaired by Roger Wicker (R-MS) with Jack Reed (D-RI) as the ranking minority member, issued a statement vowing to conduct what they call "vigorous oversight" on the strikes in the Caribbean on . . . well, they likely weren't drug runners. They were more likely fishing boats, struck on orders from Hegseth with approval from Trump mainly to . . . provoke a war against Venezuela to get to its vast oil reserves?
I need a drink.
There's plenty of bipartisan disgust with Hegseth over this, but he does have his defenders . . . notably Megyn Kelly, who, having offered a quasi-defense of Jeffrey Epstein having sex with females who are almost women - that is, girls, spoke to Mark Halperin on her talk show and said that she would like nothing better than to see the survivors of the boar attack not just killed but tortured in the process so they can feel severe pain as punishment for running fentanyl to Americans, even though she has no more of an idea than anyone else as to whether or not these sailors were drug runners. (I'll deal with Kelly more thoroughly later.)
With Kelly a prominent voice in the media and with Hegseth having an outsized role over civilian administration of the military, the rest of the world is pretty much convinced that America has descended into lawlessness and cruelty and sees no reason to trust again for a long, long time, even after Trump and his minions are gone. And that is yet another reason why I keep advocating for the United States to be broken up into separate countries.
And by the way, forget Canada, which has a lot less oil than Venezuela . . . I think Trump wants Venezuela to be the fifty-first state. But, given Trump's record, I'll bet a lot of Venezuelans, given the choice would prefer to stick with Nicolas Maduro.
Sunday, November 30, 2025
John Lennon and Yoko Ono: Unfinished Music No. 1 - Two Virgins (1968)
Saturday, November 29, 2025
Climate Clownishness
Friday, November 28, 2025
Music Video Of the Week - November 28, 2025
Thursday, November 27, 2025
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Mikie Makes a Move
Sunday, November 23, 2025
Ryan's Fall
Saturday, November 22, 2025
I Give Up
Friday, November 21, 2025
Music Video Of the Week - November 21, 2025
"Good Enough" by Bonnie Raitt (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)
Thursday, November 20, 2025
Trump Is a Dead Duck
It happened.
House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson was finally forced to swear in newly elected Representative Adelita Grijalva (D-AZ), who was the 218th signatory to the discharge petition to release the Epstein files. With that, the House had a vote on the issue, and, to everyone's surprise, the vote to release the Epstein files did not get 218 votes.
It got 427 votes. Of the eight House members who didn't vote for it, seven of them didn't vote. The only one who voted no was Representative Clay Higgins (R-LA), about as MAGA as MAGA gets.
With that overwhelming vote in favor of releasing the files, the Senate consented unanimously to have the files released. Trump - who suddenly said he wanted the Epstein files released - signed the bill authorizing their release. He vetoed it not because he has nothing to hide and wants to prove it after being harassed over the files for so long but because the vote in favor of releasing the files was so overwhelming that he didn't want to be humiliated by being overridden.
Now, just about everyone in the media is calling Trump a lame-duck President. I won't call him that, because to do so would grant that I should call him a President. But I do agree that he's living on borrowed time, and hopefully, the lease is up soon. Not on January 20, 2029 or on November 4 2026, but much, much sooner. Article II, Section 4 of the Constitution allows an entire presidential administration to be removed for . . . treason.
Feeling like a dead duck . . . spitting out pieces of his broken luck . . .
Monday, November 17, 2025
Kiss of Death
Sunday, November 16, 2025
The Ballad of Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein
I've heard so many minute details about these e-mails to the point where my brain hurts. So let me boil it down for you:
Saturday, November 15, 2025
Imaginary Friends
In Marion, Ohio in 1967, two teenagers who had just graduated from high school were hanging out and listening to the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, enraptured by the groundbreaking arrangements in the band's latest work. The teenage boys, Robert Sims and Kevin McClaine, had been in a high school rock and roll band and had played numerous school dances and events before the band broke up in advance of taking their senior finals and graduating. Now, that summer, they had few prospects of their own. "Robbie," as Sims was called by his friends, was less academically accomplished than his two younger sisters, and his father, frustrated by Robbie's middling grades, wanted him to work in his walk-up insurance office downtown on West Center Street, and Kevin had no immediate plans for college. Sims, who played guitar and sang, and McClaine, who played guitar and bass and also sang, were working at part-time jobs wondering what to do next. The more they listened to Sgt. Pepper - and, when released in the U.S. later that year, Jimi Hendrix's debut album, Are You Experienced? - the more they were convinced that they should form a new band. Inspired by the new "power trio" concept epitomized by the Jimi Hendrix Experience and Cream, they found Eric Martin, a local drummer, and got him to join them. Soon they were headed for Cleveland to take part in the burgeoning rock scene that would eventually include the James Gang and the Raspberries.
Sims had been influenced by the Beatles, Bob Dylan, and folk and country music, while McClaine had drawn inspiration from the Rolling Stones, Motown, and bluesmen like Howlin' Wolf. "Kevin introduced me to the blues," Sims later recalled, "and listening to guys like Muddy Waters and Mississippi Fred McDowell shaped and inspired me as a guitarist." Eventually, they settled on a permanent name, the Streamers - "it was the only available name we could think of that we all hated the least," McClaine said - and with an expanded lineup that included keyboardist/vocalist Joe Wood (below) and second guitarist Tim Wright, they released their self-titled debut album on a small label in the spring of 1971.
Friday, November 14, 2025
Music Video Of the Week - November 14, 2025
Thursday, November 13, 2025
MS Now? MS No!
As you may have heard ,the spinoff of MSNBC from NBC News and COmcast is just about complete, and what used to be called MSNBC for merely thirty years is to be known as MS NOW.
MS Now? Nah, not now. Maybe later . . .
Wednesday, November 12, 2025
A Golden Farewell
Born in 1940 to an Italian family in Baltimore, moved to California, developed incredible skills to convey a statement . . .. What can I say? This American original is one of the most influential people of the past century.
But enough about Frank Zappa . . .
Once Pelosi got the Affordable Care Act passed, she should have prepared the next generation of House Democrats for leadership, but like her ex-friend Joe Biden, she held onto power too long, freezing out House Democrats young enough to be her children (and when one of them, Mikie Sherrill - my congresswoman, now governor-elect of New Jersey - was first sworn into the House, she voted for another House Democrat to be Speaker). Her lieutenants were also oldsters, James Clyburn of South Carolina and Steny Hoyer of her native Maryland - hardly an indication of trust in the younger generations. Her handling of Joe Biden's plans to stand for re-election to the Presidency in 2024 - refusing to take his yeses for an answer when he answered the question as to whether he was staying in the campaign - may have been justified when it became apparent that Biden would have to step down, but that doesn't excuse her ungraceful method of getting to change his mind, which was about as subtle as a pie in the face.
Her last great act came in 2024, after she stepped down as leader of the House Democrats when she used her power to deny Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York the chance to serve as ranking Democrat on the House Oversight Committee after Trump was returned to power and instead pushed (successfully) for Gerry Connelly of Virginia, who was 74 and dying of esophageal cancer, because it was "his turn." (A few months later, the Grim Reaper also decided it was Connelly's turn.) Pelosi remained adamant against a generational change not on her terms to the very end, deciding her successor and leaving the keys to her fiefdom to Hakeem Jeffries, the one guy from Brooklyn that's as feckless and as malleable as Chuck Schumer.
Anyway, I hope Nancy enjoys the winter of her life when she goes into retirement. Just one tip, Madam Speaker Emerita - watch out where those Huskies go, and don't you eat the yellow snow! 😝

























