Sunday, July 6, 2008

I the record collector....


When I was a child I loved to look through my parents records that they saved from when they were young.  The dusty, musty smell they acquire through the years, the history, the music, the size, the novelty, the album art, and the vinyl are just a few of the reasons why I love records.  I go to estate sales, garage sales, and thrift stores to find the real gems.  When I am at these places the best part is that I have no idea what it is going to sound like, so I judge the album by the year it was made, the cover, and what type of music.  The best part is that a whole album is only one dollar or less at these places.  I usually search for 60's garage, psych, surf, exotica and rock n' roll.   I do occasionally go do record stores if I know exactly what I want and if I think they will have it.  I hate buying new, re-issued lp's.  The older and rarer the record the better!  I love knowing that the records I own have been around longer then I have.  Some of the records I own have peoples names on them from the previous owners, which I love!  I just picture Pam for instance, listening to the same record as me 40 years ago, and she wrote her name on her records so they would not get lost at the crazy dance parties she attended.  When my friends and I get together we throw a stack of 45's on our record players and dance all night long!  
I am dedicated to listening to my music on vinyl, though I do have the new forms of consuming music like everyone else.  I have some CD's that I purchased because they are awesome compilations that Rhino puts out, for example Nuggets, Pebbles, and Girl Groups.  I also have an ipod so I can listen to music in my car.  If I have a rare record that I love and want it on my ipod, my boyfriend will record the album through garage band and them import it to itunes.  I do also download music from Chocoreve and Twilight Zone.  I use these sites because the downloading is free, the only restriction you can only do it once every several hours.  I believe that downloading music should be free because if I download an album or a few songs and like them then I will be on a search to find the real first issued album.  I believe that albums are a work of art.  Bands put a lot of time and effort into recording and mixing their songs to sound perfect and compile them into a perfect listening order.  Not only is the music important, the cover is important in conveying what kind of band they are.  Having the real record also has a more warm or raw sound then a downloaded version.  The added joy to records are that they are memorabilia and a novelty.  I know that some people find records a pain in the ass because they are lazy and complain about having to get up and flip the record.  I feel that records make the parties.  How fun is an ipod at a party?  You plug it in and forget about it, and forget you are listening to music.  My friends and I all get together everyone brings their favorite records and we take turn playing our tunes, talking about the music, sharing thoughts and details about the bands and of course, dance.  It just makes for a more pleasurable time.  We all wish that we were in our twenties in the 60's when music was just better!  It was a better time, and a better time makes for better music!  


Communist Party Songs!!!!


This is a "Hi- Infidelity" greeting card made to look like an LP.  Inside there is a paper record to write your message for any occasion.  There were a few different cards made in the 60's, but they were pretty rare.  I just thought this one was funny and wanted to share! 

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Guess Who's Coming to Dinner


The film Guess Who's Coming to Dinner was produced by Stanley Kramer in 1967.  It is a truly classic movie that portrays social issues of American society in that era.  The film succeeded in breaking the tension and conflict of interracial marriage.  The movie starts with Joanna, played by Katherine Hepburn, and Dr. John Prentice, played by Sidney Poitier, getting off a plane from Hawaii.  Dr. Prentice was in Hawaii on business and met Joanna, they fell in love and were engaged to be married.  They flew back to San Francisco to get permission from her parents.  This leads viewers to believe that they are going to watch a love story but it is actually a debate about interracial marriage.  Joanna has an optimist out look and sees nothing wrong with interracial marriage because of the way she was raised.  John on the other hand wants nothing else but to be with Joanna, though he is more skeptical to what their parents will think of the matter.  Both of their parents have the same reaction to their situation, which was also the same reaction of the society at the time.  Though they only had one day to make their decision of where they stand on the interracial marriage.  Her father Mike Drayton, is a liberal and even he had to question his beliefs.  He did not ever expect his own daughter to bring a colored man home.  Though Joanna's mother reminds him that they never said, "don't ever fall in love with a colored man".  Joanna's parents both search for a reason they should not get married besides their race, but they fail.  Dr. John Prentice character was the perfect man, he was intelligent, rich, handsome and noble.  Kramer adds one scene to this movie, which is a perfect example to this.  Mr. Drayton wanted to get away from the decision making so he went with his wife to get some ice cream.  He was hoping for the same ice cream he usually gets, but instead he got a different flavor; Oregon Boysenberry.  When he took his first bite he hated it, but then he took a few more bites and started to grow on him.  This is a perfect metaphor of his new relationship with John, he might not like it at first but soon he will agree with it.  
John's parents flew in to meet their son's new love and are shocked that she is a white girl.  The parents discuss the issue they have on their hands.  The father's views reflect the beliefs of  their generations.  John refers to his father as an Uncle Tom and says,"Your generation will always think of itself as a Negro first and a man second.  I think of myself as a man."  The mother's on the other hand notice the love in their children's eyes and think back to when they were first in love.  John's mother talks with Mr. Drayton and informs him that he is opposing the marriage because he has forgotten what it is like to be in love.  This was the first logical argument he heard all day and helped him make his decision.  
May I remind you that the movie was written only a few years after the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Martin Luther King's "I have a dream" speech.  This movie obviously represents these social issues of the United States of that period.  Interracial marriage was still illegal in some states.  This movie spoke out to those experiencing the same issue at the at that time period.  This movie is more like a piece of history, the issues Americans have dealt with and how far we have come in the world of social change.  Through a roller coaster of emotions, the movie will make you laugh and cry.  It is a must see.  You have to find out if love will overcome prejudice.   

Are they really green??


As we all know there are a lot of green products hitting the shelves and they are coming with a great marketing plan.  But are they really green?  According to Jacquelyn Ottman there are going to be some big changes this year in the world of green marketing.  She believes that green claims are going to be questioned, electronic companies will claim eco-performance, and companies will make and sell more green products.  Products are going to try to use less packaging, less energy use and reduced toxicity(no pvc or heavy metals).  They are going to be marketed to have higher performance levels, aesthetics and cost effectiveness on the front of their marketing materials, while awaiting potential greenwashing backlash.  Greenwashing  is used to describe the act of misleading consumers regarding the environmental practices of a company or the environmental benefits of a product or service.  
This article discusses that green products are Not as green as they claim to be.   For example, the sierra club named the Chevy Tahoe the "Green Car of the Year".  It is an eight-passenger car plastered with "hybrid" labels, even though it only gets 20 miles to the gallon.  The Toyota should have been named the green car of the year because it gets 46 miles to the gallon.  I do not see how they call a huge SUV a green vehicle.  Water bottles are pitched as eco friendly because of the eco-shaped bottle claiming that the manufacturer uses 30% less plastic than regular bottles because of the new shape.  I ask myself all the time, how do they get away with using terms like eco-friendly when their bottles are made using large amounts of energy, have do be transported using fossil fuels, and the bottles end up in landfills without biodegradability.  Simple Green is another product that has been around for years and is advertised as a green cleaner that is safer alternative to other cleaners.  They leave out that the key ingredient is butyl cellosolve, which is the same toxic solvent that is found in some traditional all-purpose cleaners.  
What it boils down to is that large companies are marketing their products as green when it turns out to be they are not even good for the environment, not to mention all the resources it takes to make them.  The companies have been using terms like "earth friendly", which really has no meaning.  What defines "earth friendly" and what gives these companies the right to double the selling price because of this term.  Within the next year Landor Associates estimated there will be $500 billion spent on green products.  Green products have been on the rise because of concern with global warming, but buying green will not cut close to cutting emissions.  Scot Case from Terra Choice Environmental Marketing said, there is "zero enforcement" in green marketing.  His company did a study and found that 99% of 1,018 green advertisement claims were misleading.  
I understand that companies want to make money and with global warming prevention pitching, what better way to do it.  I am for companies that are trying to design better ways to minimize resource use, but they need to look at their product from all angles.  For example, the man that made Swiffer made it to cut the water usage that goes along with mopping the floor.  What he didn't think of was that you have to throw the sheets away that are just going sit in a landfill.  I am not trying to say it is easy to design the perfect green product, it is almost impossible, but companies that wish to put out a green product should be required to qualify certain qualifications to market their products as green.  

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Censored Radio


When I was a child, as soon as I would get into my moms car I immediately started flipping through the stations to find something good.  If I came across Howard Stern cussing up a storm, talking about the way women's butts and boobs look my mother would not be happy camper.  This is why I believe that the FCC censoring terrestrial radio is a good thing.  Here is an example of why the FCC regulate what they air.  Satellite radio is like cable television, you know what you are getting.  People pay, and should pay, to have a wide variety of channels and a few promiscuous ones that might show a woman's breast if they're lucky, HBO and Showtime for example.  If parents do not want their children to hear indecent or obscene things then they should of thought of that before they purchased satellite radio.  According to this article there are an increasing amount of parents complaining of profanity, which is lame!  Satellite radio is paid for for the same reason, they have wider variety of stations and if listeners are lucky they might hear one of George Carlin's (RIP) seven filthy words you cannot say on TV.  The people that buy into cable television and satellite radio are adults, which can listen and watch these adult topics.  Terrestrial radio is free and available for everyone if they have a radio and a good antenna. This means under age people would be able to hear profanity, which is why censorship the FCC regulation is good for terrestrial radio.  

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Water for Elephants

Class system changes within all communities. Within the overall community one can be low class, but inside a small tight-knit community the same person could be upper-middle class. Jacob Jankowski is one of these people. He was brought up into a middle class family during the depression. His is father an established Veterinarian with his own practice and Jacob is a student in an Ivy League University studying to follow in his father’s footsteps. It all came to a halt when his parents died in a car accident in his last year of college. His social class immediately went from middle class to out on the streets with nothing. That morning he had parents, a home and attended a great school. Now because of his father not keeping up with the mortgage and accepting beans and eggs as payments for the last two years, Jacob is left with nothing. He is now not even on a social class scale, he is a bum.
When Jacob results to leaving town and hitching a ride on a train with no idea it was the Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth. He fell upon Blackie, Bill, Grady and Camel. Camel set Jacob up with a job on the show the next morning. Jacob’s class went from a bum to a “First of May”, which they called new workers on the show. Jacob realized that he was placed in a social class right away from the department he was working in, by his first visit to the cookhouse. The “Kinkers” are the performers, which are the upper class group of the show and they are given special treatment. They are given red and white tablecloths, silverware, and vases of flowers and they also get to sleep in late. The table Jacob is told to sit at is a bare wooden table with just salt and pepper and there is a canvas divider between where he is sitting and where the Kinkers sit, which informs him that he is classified as low class.  The social ladder among this circus starts with the bosses, Uncle Al and August, which are at the top of the ladder. Next down the ladder are the performers, which are upper class because without them there would be no circus.  Then the animals follow the performers for the same reason they are a necessity.  At the bottom of the scale are the workingmen, which are called “Roustabouts” they do everything from cleaning out the stock cars, feeding and bathing animals, and putting up the big top.
Everyone is very serious about their specified departments, which defy their social class. Sleeping quarters, eating arrangements, and bathing are completely segregated. A perfect example is when August suggests that Jacob sleep with Kinko who is a performer. When they arrive in the ring stock car, Kinko’s reaction was that he is a performer and he will not sleep with a menagerie man who is low class workingman. Ironically, later they became good friends and Jacob got to call him by his real name, Walter.  They decided upon these sleeping arrangements after Uncle Al and August found out that Jacob is a veterinarian. This is their way of promoting him and giving him a step up on the circuses social ladder. Not only does Jacob get better sleeping quarters because of him being the shows new vet, the next time he goes to the cookhouse with August his eating arrangements have changed to.  As he walked over to the workingmen’s tables August said that, that was nonsense, he was the shows vet. Just from one conversation with Uncle Al his social class completely changed, he was suddenly bumped up to the nicely dressed tables where the upper class performers sit.  His bathing situation also changed.  August said we can hardly expect our vet to live like a workingman, and he arranged for him to get two buckets of water daily and new set of clothes from the Monday Man, which only the performers and bosses received. Jacob’s new social class changed everything, where he sleeps, eats and bathes.  Not only does he get all these new amenities he also got what he really wanted, to see Marlena more. He also was invited to enjoy extravagant dinners and liquor with August and Marlena up by the front of the train where the ride is a lot smoother and looks a lot nicer, which is a very rare honor. 
The workingmen of the show know they would never be offered anything of the sort. The working men are located further down to the back of the train, they call it the Flying Squadron where the environment, is nothing compared where the performers live.  The performers is very clean and has a nice paint job on the outside.  The Flying Squadron is very dingy and mangy from the outside and filthy on the inside.  The working men are even father down on the social ladder from the animals.  They get better treatment then the working men.  The reason behind it is that they can replace working men but not the animals. 
Even the shows payday is dependent upon social classes. The performers and bosses always get paid, with the exception of one time the performers did not, but it is the workingmen who do not get paid if Uncle Al decides to hold back. If you do not get paid four weeks in a row that is Al’s way of saying you better just stop showing up. If certain men were not needed and could not afford to pay them anymore Uncle Al would send Earl to “redlight” them, which means throw them off the train while its moving, which results in death. 
Jacob’s new class and responsibilities brought him good things and also bad. He all of the sudden had it all pile up on him. He had to deal with August’s schizophrenic personality, which had led to him taking his anger out on Rosie and Marlena. He also had to take care of Camel because of the disease he got from drinking jake. Lastly, being put up to act as mediator to August and Marlena for Uncle Al to get them back together so the circus would not fall apart. Plus he had already fallen in love with Marlena, made love to her and had his child on the way. The fight Jacob and August had because of August suspicion of adultery (socially unacceptable) between Jacob and Marlena, left all three of them black and blue. When Jacob brings Marlena to a hotel the man at the front counter judges them both when he sees their battered faces. Jacob asks for a room and he denied them even though the sign said vacancy. He also stated that they do not rent to unmarried couples. Just because they had bruises on their faces the clerk immediately placed them as low class and denied their room. As they were leaving a woman notices Marlena’s face from the circus poster and then the clerk changes his outlook when he realizes that she is a circus star, which places her in a higher class and says they might have a room after all. 
When Jacob is in his nineties his life is a lot different then it was when he was younger. His situation is similar to the lives the animals lived during the circus. He is told when it is time to eat, sleep, bathe and is contained in a space. The animals had the same treatment they were fed when food was available, bathe when water was available and were locked in their cages until show time. His favorite nurse, Rosemary plays his role when he was young. She helps bathe him, makes sure he is fed and makes sure he is in good health. Young Jacob as the circuses vet did all the same tasks to the animals. His social class has changed because now he is old and most believe that ninety three year old people are worthless. He is back to the bottom of the social ladder again after a long life, but he proved to everyone at the end of the story that he was still able to run away and go back to his so called home where he will keep going until he can’t go anymore.

Lovemark


The description of a lovemark is something that is close to your heart and mind and creates an emotional connection you just can not live without. This emotional connection makes a relationship with that product, which is very true. As do many other people, I have a large list of lovemarks such as, Disneyland (Anaheim), Oregon, In-n-out, Weekend at Bernies, The Rolling Stones, Lifesavers, ChapStick (the black label), Coke a Cola (glass bottle), Lipton Noodle Soup and Premium saltines.  With every one of my lovemarks I have a story and a feeling attached to them, which makes them my love marks. Though I do have a lovemark that I have a relationship with above all the rest; Caress soap.
My mother used caress soap long before I was born, so it has been in my shower and bath tub since I was born.  When I was a child I was a tom boy and I hated bathing.  My mother knew that when I would take a shower I was not cleaning myself so she would make me take showers with her once in a while.  I hated it and the only thing that made the experience enjoyable was Caress soap.  I remember the Caress commercials I used to watch when I was a kid and their slogan was always stuck in my head; "Before you Dress Caress".  The way they made their soap different from all other soaps was the added bath oil that leaves your body soft and smooth.  It really does, I will not use any other soap and if I have to my whole day will be off because of it. It is kind of like breaking a routine.  Other soaps like Lever 2000, Dove, Zest and many others make my skin feel like rubber after I wash off the suds.  Hotel soap is the worst and makes me want to go home immediately, which is why I bring Caress every trip I take.  Caress does not give that feeling, it feels like silky smooth baby skin.
The hallmarks of a Lovemark are mystery, sensuality, and intimacy.  Every shower I take I am taken back to when I was a child, which is the mystery.  The comforting smell of my mother that has never changed to this day is the sensuality.  The intimacy is the luxury of being home in your own shower receiving the same experience as ever that is like no other.  Also it is just great soap that has never let me down.  If they ever go out of business I will go all over town to buy up a lifetime supply!