Message Forum

Welcome to the Watterson High School Message Forum.

The message forum is an ongoing dialogue between classmates. There are no items, topics, subtopics, etc.

Forums work when people participate - so don't be bashful! Click the "Post Message" button to add your entry to the forum.


 
go to bottom 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  
Next Page      

12/08/22 12:27 PM #11923    

 

Michael McLeod

I love the expressions you come up with, Jack.


12/08/22 02:17 PM #11924    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Mike...more on the Magi....a historical look back:     

https://www.catholic.com/magazine/print-edition/mysteries-of-the-magi 


12/09/22 11:17 AM #11925    

 

John Maxwell

Mike,
Never know with you. But I read your Magi piece and by golly you can spin a spun yarn better than most. Made me think of the ancient aliens crew who would have probably researched ancient documentation of weather conditions, and galactic anomolies recorded in ancient texts. Love a good detective story.

12/09/22 11:42 AM #11926    

 

Michael McLeod

I didn't write that, Jack. But like any run of the mill, chronically self-doubting, painfully insecure mid-level journalist, I accept compliments in any form. It's like buying second-hand stuff out of the bargain bin and presenting it to my ego, which never asks me where I got it.


12/10/22 12:54 AM #11927    

 

David Mitchell

Just a fun salute to our new hero - Donna

But ours is no "prima donna".

(couldn't resist)

 




12/10/22 01:02 AM #11928    

 

David Mitchell

Or should we use this one?  

Ritchie or Dion?

(loved both of these songs back then)




12/10/22 04:27 AM #11929    

 

Donna Kelley (Velazquez)

Haha! Ok guys, this is getting a little embarrassing! smiley 

No heroes or heroines in this story except for the brave Antoniuk family and all the other families like them around the world.  All of us want to help.....we just have to be open to the ways that present themselves.

Happy Holiday Season, everyone!!


12/10/22 11:17 AM #11930    

 

John Maxwell

Mike,
Good one. Can I borrow that explaination? Lmfao

12/10/22 12:05 PM #11931    

 

Michael McLeod

Honest, Donna: If I can squeeze in one last thing:

I figured mentioning that beautiful story might embarrass you, and I apologize if it did. But it's such a great Christmas season real-life parable.  And -- as you have implied, and as I see it too -- its moral is that we can all just be there in an ordinary way for people in our own little sphere of influence who need help, be they friends or strangers. We were so damn lucky to have the place and the parenting we had. We now live in a world of information overload, and some of that information is just heartbreaking, or confusing, or flat-out evil and horrendous. And the worst thing about it is that it makes us overlook the fact that what's real is what's straight in front of us. I just try to focus more and more on that.

For some reason, sheep-herding just popped into my head, I'm thinking it's from some manger scene I remember. Now we're all just out here in our last few moments of tending the particular place and the particular herd we've been blessed with, moment by moment, doing the best we can.  Sounds simple. That doesn't make it any less powerful.

Now I'm remembering a line from a play or a movie I must have seen, when one frustrated character says to another: "Why do you always think so much!"

And one other fragment comes to mind, one that somehow seems related, and then I'll stop.

This is from some new-agey seminar I went to back in the 70s, 80s maybe:

"Do the right thing. And if it doesn't work, do the right thing."

Rinse, repeat. It's all we can do, and in the end, I'm utterly convinced, it's a lot more that we know. 

 


12/10/22 01:56 PM #11932    

 

David Mitchell

Donna, 

You know I'm just teasing, but I couldn't resist.

I could have played "We Could Be Heroes" by David Bowie.


12/10/22 02:04 PM #11933    

 

David Mitchell

This has to be the coolest thing I have seen on the internet!

Joy to the World!




12/11/22 12:23 PM #11934    

 

Michael McLeod

LOL Dave. We're talkin' body language. In its purest form.


12/11/22 05:04 PM #11935    

 

Mark Schweickart

I know I have posted this idea before, but since Donna  brought the conversation around to the plight of the Ukrainian refugees again, let me toss this out once more. Maybe it could be a Christmas present idea, and have the bonus of knowing that your money went  to a refugee organization. A friend of mind, an artist by the name of Rich Wilkie, set himself the extraordinary task of painting 100 different portraits based on photos of refugee children, and donating all of the proceeds. He has a website set up that allows you to order either the original artwork (rather pricey in the $500 range), or prints in various sizes (that are in the $40-$60 range), or prints mounted and framed in a variety of formats that range from about $100-$300, depending on the framing selection). Check his work out at richwilkie.com. Here are a few of my favorites:



12/12/22 12:49 AM #11936    

 

David Mitchell

Mary Margaret,

Since your last special post (about Steve Kirsch's vacine findings) does not allow us to reply, I will post a repsonse here in the regular forum. I would refer you to an article in the McGill University (McGill is one of the most highly respected Universities in North America) Science bulletin titled; 

 

"Steve Kirsch and the Seduction of Simplicity" 

"An entrepreneur decided to invest money into researching off-patent drugs against COVID-19. Why did that lead him to the anti-vaxx movement?"

 

Basically, the article confirms that this guy (a brilliant mind in the field of high tech, but not in bio-chemistry), has (for unknown reasons) completely mis-interpreted or falsified his data to make a point that is almost the opposite of the known facts.   

 


12/12/22 07:12 PM #11937    

 

Michael McLeod

oh boy do I get nostalgic. we sure had good music.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVDv7RwmZic&ab_channel=kylecrazyford


12/14/22 01:02 PM #11938    

 

Michael McLeod

 
Again from the music front: More than once, out of the blue, just listening to this theme made me cry. This explanation from the Times makes me feel less foolish for it. It's primal. Think I'll listen to it right now, and dream a bit.
James Poniewozik
 
Suffering from a case of middle age, I recently decided to learn the piano as an adult. The lesson I played on Monday was the theme from “Twin Peaks” — well, the idiot-proof, one-hand version that my iPad teaching app prepared for me, built around that low, hypnotic pattern. Bum bommm. Bum BOMMM.
Later that day, in the sort of coincidence that seems to happen only in dreams and in small, spirit-afflicted logging towns in Washington, came news that the song’s composer, Angelo Badalamenti, had died at age 85.
Badalamenti was a classically trained composer with a long résumé, including the scores for David Lynch’s “Blue Velvet” and “Mulholland Drive.” But his memory is secured by those mesmeric notes, which opened the red curtains on Lynch and Mark Frost’s eerie mystery, and which stand above and apart from most music written for television like an ancient evergreen in an old-growth forest.
In a recent list of the 100 greatest TV themes ever, Rolling Stone ranked “Twin Peaks” at 35. It would be unfair to use Badalamenti’s passing to dunk on that choice. (Counterpoint: Come on.) But whether or not it is the best theme of all time, it may be the most otherworldly, the most unlike anything that came before it.
TV themes before 1990, when “Twin Peaks” premiered, tended to be come-ons or introductions. They whipped up a sense of excitement and adventure, like the theme from “Mission Impossible.” Or they outlined characters and told a story, like Waylon Jennings’s “Good Ol’ Boys” from “The Dukes of Hazzard.”
Sign up for the Watching newsletter, for Times subscribers only. Streaming TV and movie recommendations from critic Margaret Lyons and friends. Get it in your inbox.
Badalamenti’s theme is not a synopsis. It is not a fanfare. It is a passageway, a portal. It is slow, spare and meditative, even by the relatively languid TV pacing of three decades ago. It tells you to reset your pulse, abandon your expectations and step for an hour into a dark wood where the owls are not what they seem.
Image
A photo of Angelo Badalamenti, wearing a black sweater and white shirt, seated in front of two keyboards in his home studio.
Angelo Badalamenti was a classically trained composer with multiple film scores to his name. His memory is secured by the opening notes of the “Twin Peaks” theme.Credit...Nancy Wegard for The New York Times
That opening motif seems to be plucked on the strings of an instrument that no human ever played, because in a way it is. According to Badalamenti, it began as a sample on a synthesizer, pitched lower and doubled with another guitar sound. “There’s no synth that has that sound, and it’s much too low to be an electric guitar, and it’s not a bass,” Badalamenti told Vulture in 2016. “We kept that quiet because we didn’t want anyone else to use it.”
The resulting sound is simultaneously twangy and chthonic. It seems to vibrate from the earth, from your bones, from inside a tree trunk. It is, like the series, both filled with ghostly dread and saturated with romantic emotion.
The theme couples that figure with a wash of dreamy synthesizers. Their interplay sets up contrasts that Lynch and Frost built into their supernatural murder mystery. It’s spooky but also naïve. It’s retro, with echoes of a rockabilly riff, and space-age. (The synthesizers, the critic John Rockwell wrote in The Times in 1990, “invest everything with an electronic glow, as if the music were radioactive.”)
The music for “Twin Peaks” had to make realistic and surrealistic sense. It needed to work in a cherry-pie all-American diner and in the anteroom of the underworld. Badalamenti met the challenge in his playful and minimal score for the rest of the series, from the wistful “Laura Palmer’s Theme” to the seductive “Audrey’s Dance” to the jazzy, twitchy “Dance of the Dream Man.”
The score played with Americana and pop history, but despite coming out at the dawn of the age of TV irony — “Seinfeld” had premiered a year before — it never winked. Like “Twin Peaks” itself, it meant what it said, even if you could spend your life grasping after that meaning.
When Lynch and Frost brought “Twin Peaks” back for a revival in 2017, it was in many ways a different series with a different sound: even more gorgeously and truculently experimental, with an audio palette that leaned heavily on Lynch’s eerie, mechanical sound textures.
But as the opening sequence began, there it was again: Bum bommm. Bum BOMMM. TV series are rituals, and those opening notes feel quasi religious, like an “om,” the one true bass line thrumming under eternity.
Those notes live somewhere deep in my brain; I could feel that as I clumsily plunked them out on my piano. This is the power of a great theme: However disorienting things might get, on the screen or in life, you can always return to that musical mantra. Angelo Badalamenti is gone now. But his song remains, pulling me ever deeper into the woods.

12/14/22 04:16 PM #11939    

 

John Jackson

This NYT story ("For the Lost Children of Tuam, a Proper Burial at Last") about one of Ireland's "Magdalen laundries" breaks your heart.  Tuam, where St. Mary’s Mother and Baby Home is located, is not out in the boonies – it’s just a few miles outside of Galway.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/14/world/europe/ireland-mother-and-baby-home-tuam.html?smid=url-share

Ireland has its share of skeletons in the closet, but they’re not alone.  Reminds me of a film exhibit I saw in Ottawa at the Canadian Museum of History about the residential schools in western Canadian provinces where Indian kids were taken away from their families and given a Christian “education”.  Many never saw their parents again and more than a few died.  These schools finally closed in the 1950’s.  Earlier this year Pope Francis visited the site of one of them to apologize.

And in the U.S., let’s not even think about slavery or our treatment of Native Americans.  But at least that wasn’t done under the guise of saving souls.


12/15/22 12:37 AM #11940    

 

David Mitchell

M/M

I'd be very careful quoting anything to do with Dr. Joseph Mercola (the interviewer in your article). Again, I would site a study from McGill University about his terrible reputation as one of the worst mis-representors of "facts" about anything to do with the medical science surrounding Covid (or other medical matters). 

Here is the title of the article from McGill University's Office of Science and Society.

 

 
 

The Upside-Down Doctor 

 
Joe Mercola is a doctor at war with medicine. His take on the pandemic is a lucrative, conspiratorial fever dream
 
The first two pargraphs: (sorry I cannot line this up correctly)

 


12/15/22 04:18 PM #11941    

 

Mark Schweickart

John – Thanks for the link to the NYTimes article about the tragic story of the Unwed Mother/Baby Home run by Cartholic nuns. As you say, heartbreaking.

Your comments about similar Canadian institutions for indigenous children, reminds me of something I just started watching on Amazon Prime a few days ago, a show called "Three Pines" starring Alfred Molina. This is, in most ways, pretty much like the many other TV detective series, with the exception that it takes place in a somewhat rural area of Canada, and the murders being solved (so far at least, I've only watched two episodes) are connected to a large spooky house that used to be a one of those deplorable institutions. If you like detective shows, and if you subscribe to Amazon Prime Video, you might want to check it out. It's quite good. Here's the trailer:



 


12/15/22 05:10 PM #11942    

 

Michael McLeod

When we talk about peace on earth this season, itt's not gonna feel like a half-ass pleasantry. More like a fervent, looking-over-our-shoulders request. 


12/16/22 12:54 AM #11943    

 

David Mitchell

 OOOOOOOO

        MMMMMMMMM

               GOLLY!

 

Please tell me I am dreaming!  Just when we all thought things could not get any crazier,,,,,

 

 

"A major announcement"     

$99 digital trading cards  ("very much like baseball cards")

 

 

God Help Us


12/16/22 05:14 AM #11944    

 

Mark Schweickart

Dave -- did you mean to say "things" couldn't get any crazier, or "HE" couldn't get any crazier? But of course we all know the answer to that -- of course he can. Buckle up. 


12/16/22 10:51 AM #11945    

 

Janie Albright (Blank)

Dave, Insane! Watch these different late night hosts take on this. They keep reassuring us they did not make this up bc is really looks like one of their gags! wink

https://messaging-custom-newsletters.nytimes.com/template/notifications?campaign_id=193&emc=edit_ntln_20221216&instance_id=80324&nl=best-of-late-night&productCode=NTLN&regi_id=94423924&segment_id=119996&te=1&uri=nyt%3A%2F%2Farticle%2Fed0ccc9c-0d38-52cc-b48a-d792e8f5c4ba&user_id=35f494aeaabe8e9e41b29e6f10d4039c 


12/16/22 11:29 AM #11946    

 

Michael McLeod

I gotta say: there's a lot of pep in this place. Really enjoy everyone's contribution from various points of view and sampling of world events etc. recently. And yes, Janie, much of it is so crazy you think somebody made it all up - which is, in a manner of speaking, exactly, literally, what they did in some cases. 

And as long as we're talking about political make-believe: If you love the theater and find yourself bored by biographical musicals about famous singing groups or recording artists - they call them "jukebox musicals" - anyway if you like musicals but want more substance and you get a chance to see a touring or NYC production of Hadestown -- go for it! absolutely one of the most subtle, spectacular, inventive musicals I've ever seen. Though not religious in the conventional sense, it's a spiritual experience, intellectually uplifting, and fun- just boisterous fun. That is one hell of a rare package deal.

Poke around and read up about it before you go or it might lose you. It lost me even after I read a few reviews and reconnected with the Greek mythology it borrows from but I didn't mind.

Either way it's well worth the effort. 


12/16/22 12:58 PM #11947    

 

David Mitchell

P.s.

I got up this morning and read where all 45,000 of the "trading cards" sold out.

And they are reselling with prices reaching up to $8,000 - yikes !!!!!!!!!

 

I keep thinking we will wake up one day and see this guy, telling us it was "just a story".

 


go to top 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  
Next Page