“Singer Susan Boyle, our latest instant celebrity, reminds me of any number of singers I conducted in amateur renditions of the easier Schubert or Haydn masses, or the sort of matron who sings “Katti-Shaw” or “Buttercup” in the local Gilbert and Sullivan production. Musical talent springs up like grass, and engaging voices are a dollar a dozen. That Boyle has come to embody the triumph of ordinary people over obscurity, complete with invitations to appear on Oprah and Larry King, is disheartening. The popular audience in the West likes to validate its own mediocrity, and crowns stars-for-a-day.” “Spengler” for the Asia Times April 21, 2009
Is Spengler right? Does the U.S. praise mediocrity. Do the parading America Idol “losers” really think that anybody can be a star? After years of being all about looks, Hollywood embraces a person like karaoke lover William Hung got a record deal from his being tone deaf. Paris Hilton became famous from inheriting millions of dollars. Yes today, reality TV relishes the opposite extreme with shows like VH1 Flavor of Love starring a naturally and almost nutritiously inebriated guy who thinks wearing a top hat and a cartoonishly ponderous clock (which truthfully does not tell time at all) to church is somehow not ostentatious and hemakes a go at “love” with the most uncouth, socially inept, vapid and vacant woman to walk the earth whose most remembered words will likely be, “Bitch, I’ll kill you!” And what is to be said of the relentlessly showcased cavalcade-like fleet of willing participants in eating raw goat testicles on NBC’s Fear Factor? This apparently is part of the latest amendment to the ever-wanted and seemingly now ever-closer American Dream. Do nothing great. Look interesting doing it. Get famous. But after all this, Susan Boyle possesses something else, something which is rarely given a spotlight - talent… despite one’s not looking the part.
Yes, an article in today’s Huffington Post by Jason Linkins is actually reporting that conservative viewers of comedian Stephen Colbert’s satirical Colbert Report actually believe he is serious on some issues. A study of both conservative and liberal opinions by Ohio State University for the International Journal of Press/Politics entitled “The Irony of Satire: Political Ideology and the Motivation to See What You Want to See in The Colbert Report” concludes that conservatives feel Colbert earnestly dislikes liberalism and only pretends to be joking while liberal-leaning viewers take the show as a total satire of the ridiculous. Ultimately, the final results showed that “perceptions of Colbert’s political opinions fully mediated the relationship between political ideology and individual-level opinion.” In other words, one’s party line directly affects how Colbert’s humor is read.
Posey actually responded to the “alligator alegations in The Orlando Sentinel remarking wholeheartedly, “I expected there would be some civil debate about it, but it wasn’t civil…There is no reason to say that I’m the illegitimate grandson of an alligator.”
Could it be that politicos of all types take themselves too seriously - that they are so blinded by ideology that an unambiguously satirical fake news show on a network actually named Comedy Central has people taking umbrage with it for its “serious” suggestion that Representative Posey actually has a grandpa who is an alligator? Yes… apparently that is the case. To paraphrase Father James Martin, humor keeps one humble about oneself and speaks to a certain truth. What does this speak of any more than partisans blinded by their own self-importance?
Wax well in good humor!
Photo of the Day an Video of the Day return tomorrow.
I was having a discussion with friend last night about how the economy has seemed to put a damper on charitable contributions. I told her, “Hey it’s bad economy and that’s to be expected.” “That’s no excuse,” she replied. “People spend seven or eight dollars on coffee sometimes.” It’s a good cause, Mikey. People are selfish.”
While my quotation may be a bit less than direct, the point remains intact. How much money do we spend on TV channels we don’t watch, coffee we could easily make at home (to an extent) and food that we can never finish at our favorite restaurant? I have to ask myself at times if I’m spending too much here or there or being to hesitant in my giving and I do find that I often can give more than I first thought.
What’s your view? Can you see yourself spending less on luxuries? Can you afford to? As my father likes to say, if everyone does a little, nobody has to do a lot.
This image by Margret Bourke-White stands as one of the pivotal pieces of art capturing a divide between race and prosperity that existed 1937 America and may still exist today in the minds of many Americans. Despite the fact that unemployment had reached staggering overall lows of 25% during the Great Depression’s worst freefall, the photo forces the viewer to wonder if there are those unmentionable Black folks who will never see the cheerfully advertised “world’s highest standard of living” by their respective standards of lifetime.
Today comes part two and three of this documentary on humor in the religious life and how being too serious can be destructive to one’s sense of humility.
Both videos upload by YouTube member LoyolaPress
Wax for God’s laughter!
Father James Martin talks about why to him humor is a necessity in a Church that is often deadly serious and how Jesus’ parables may have been considered funny in his day.
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Uploaded by YouTube member LoyolaPress
Wax and laugh!
The last week in April in is National Karaoke Week in the United States
Source: MSNBC.com
In 2003, amiable amateur William Hung entered the American Idol spotlight with his spirited and equally awful rendition of Ricky Martin’s hit “She Bangs.” He politeness and positivity somehow won over America and in 2004 he scored a recording contract with Koch Records and a Billboard Top 40 album cheekily titled Inspiration. All this came from a UC Berkley Civil Engineering student who just wanted to have fun like most every karaoke patron.