Footbarn's Celebration of Theatre: Theater X-Net
Starring: Ida Rubinstein Belle Epoch Russian/Parisian beauty.
Don't miss Ida's Places in Paris, from my jet-lagged first day by the Seine.
Read more about Ida in Sisters of Salome by Toni Bentley
Visit: Michael's Montana Web Archive
Theater, Art, Flash Gordon, Funky Music and MORE!
NEW! Spitfires of the Spaceways
Watch Dale Arden rescue Flash Gordon for a change!
Charity Alert: Keep that resolution as Autumn settles in! Click on The Hunger Site every day.
Media Watch: I foolishly hit my head doing housework Saturday, and had to lie down for the rest of the day. In between naps, I watched TV and read a large-print edition of A Briefer History of Time by Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow -- Einstein and Quantum Mechanics are still at odds, and are still both correct in what they describe. String Theory is still an unfulfilled promise for unifying Theoretical Physics, but it's use of the term branes for space and time structures is pretty funny. Gravity may act like a force to us, but I still think that Einstein was onto something when he described it as an intrinsic element of Space-Time -- you can't block it, unlike other forces.
Sleazy Movies -- John Travolta and Uma Thurman in a violent fantasy about double-dealing in the Music Industry. I suspect the characterization of devious criminal Chili Palmer resembles Travolta's fellow Scientologists. Kevin Bacon and Colin Frith wasted their talent in another show-biz murder flick, unconvincingly set in the 50's and 60's, with interchangeable 21st Century blondes and their breasts on display. The female actors performed well, but they sure had degrading roles to play.
Good Movies -- Rosie Perez directed a documentary about the people of Puerto Rico, and their relatives who live and travel between the sun-kissed island and Mainland USA.
PBS -- Various Nevilles, Meters, and other New Orleans musicians were laying down those fine Louisiana Rhythm & Blues on Austin City Limits as the New Orleans Social Club. Nova had a concise run-down of the Vinland Map forgery. Mysteries of the Dead showed a convincing analysis of the Hindenburg disaster that blamed it's Aluminum Dust/Iron Oxide dirigible coating for igniting the orange fireball witnessed at it's demise, rather than the near-invisible blue-burning Hydrogen which made the doomed ship lighter than air. The metallic combination mentioned above is now used as a component of solid rocket fuel, and is easily set off with an electrical spark.
Book TV -- Jeff Cohen had some insights about the prostitution of Network News in his book Cable News Confidential . Contemptible ex-Senator John Ashcroft seemed to make a belated observation that his and his allies' divisive misuse of religion has dire consequences for civil society. Oh well, he's rich, old, and will die before the fires of Hell he ignited on Earth destroys everything he claims to treasure -- bleepin' hypocrite! Jim Bohanon and his guest were laughing about mercenaries in Iraq -- only what they said about that subject wasn't funny at all.
History Channel -- Decoding the Exodus tries too hard, and ranges too wide. There were intense cultural and commercial contacts between Egypt, The Hittites, various Greeks, and so-called Babylonians all through the Bronze Age -- trying to tie everything we know about them together via the stories of Moses is too opportunistic to be credible, but somebody gave those film makers a lot of money anyway.
A Footsbarn picture from Footsbarn itself!
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