Archive for the ‘Obamawick’ Category

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I Luv Parodies (OH!)

February 20, 2009

This NY1 parody gives us another reason to love Harlem

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Iraq War Ends

November 12, 2008

Check out this extremely realistic fake New York Times A section. My favorite part is the new motto, “All the News We Hope to Print.” The faux paper has been distributed in Manhattan all morning and is making quite the water-cooler conversation piece. Visit the pranksters’ web site while it still exists, click here.

Gawker has the scoop.

Fake New York Times

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President-Elect Barack Obama

November 6, 2008

I know the election has taken over Frederick Foxtrott, but this is just a final thought as we approach a new era in American politics, something very relevant to the trajectory of indie music.

Obama Hope

The course of the last two years has been extraordinary. President-Elect Obama says it often, but not without reason, that his candidacy is a highly unlikely story. How he came to be elected to the highest office in America is nothing short of astonishing (I knew it would happen all along). On election night I spent the evening with great friends. As soon as Pennsylvania was called after only a few short minutes, I knew that the election was over. As we waited patiently each hour, state after state closed their polls. It became clearer and clearer that this would not even be close (although I would say I always knew that too). When California, Oregon, and Washington closed we rushed to the streets of Harlem to dance and celebrate. On 125th and Adam Clayton Powell, young black and white hipsters, old sticky men and women, Arabs and Jews danced together. We all hugged each other, and recognized the immense meaning in what had just taken place. The affection came as an encouraging sign of the enthusiasm that men and women across this country will have as they engage one of the most challenging times America has faced.

harlem-rally

Last week I spent time with my family in Nebraska. My aunt’s husband, born, raised, and living in California said to me when speaking of Obama and the election, that “…if the blacks get their way, they’d turn over cars and loot stores, saying all the while this is our house now.” That is not what happened that transformative night. That is not the state of our nation. We are better than that. I am not necessarily angry because many voters are reluctant to back Obama. I understand that ideology is ideology. But many of McCain’s choices during the campaign were despicable, often to the detriment of his own chances for victory.

McCain’s choice of Palin was unbelievable. He didn’t shoot himself in the foot with the pistol; he took a shotgun to his knees. McCain, when confronted with the reality of his suicidal choice, chose revert to the Bush tactics that have come to represent the worst in politics.

McCain often said that the American public deserved to know the full extent of Obama’s association with Bill Ayers, when we already did. He remarked that ACORN had perhaps committed the most egregious voter fraud in history that threatened to tear apart the very fabric of American democracy. Give me a fucking break! ACORN is a great organization fighting the good fight! They register the under-represented to vote. Guess who turned ACORN in for submitting invalid registration forms? Who blew the whistle on these democracy killers…GASP…ACORN did! If some dip-shit canvasser hands in a bogus registration form to the main office of ACORN, they are required by law to hand in the form to election officials. They flag the form so that its validity can be assessed. Zero cases have been documented that implicate ACORN in aiding a fraudulent vote. The hyperbole used to describe ACORN is slander.

John McCain’s attempt to “Other” Barack Obama was deliberate and disgusting. While he himself had the good conscience to leave Jeremiah Wright out of his campaign ads, others associated with the campaign did not. He had no problem with the RNC mailing out fliers that said “Terrorists” on the outside with a picture of Obama on the inside.

To try and convince people that not only is Obama too inexperience to run the country but that he is a secret Al Qaeda operative is ridiculous. Although let’s be fair, all of his terrorist charges were vocalized by implication. McCain never called him a terrorist, but he agreed with his VP that Obama pals around with them. They are his friends. He sees this country as so imperfect that he is friends with people that seek to destroy it. Will McCain ever be forgiven….Palin certainly will not. In a way I feel sorry for her. Was she supposed to say no to the VP slot? She had her ideology and her Alaskan charm/personality defect. The moment things headed south for McCain, was there any doubt in the minds of most Americans whose fault it was? Hers…Or his for recruiting her in the first place? Certainly then it was the economy, as if a great VP choice is predicated on the most static of conditions. The economic turn only highlighted McCain’s poor judgment.But lets be clear, any objective (yes I can be that) analysis of the polls show that Obama’s recovery from his post GOP Convention slump occurred long before the economic crisis came to the attention of the mainstream media. In fact McCain was celebrated as overtaking Obama when he achieved a stunning lead in the polls…of an average of about 2.8 points…in 10 polls…over 4…days…stunning…really. In contrast, in the last 205 polls, Obama has tied 9 times, lost 12 times, and won 184 times, spanning over 3 months. Was there ever a question of dominance? As the old political saying goes:

Even A Dead Cat Bounces

The miscalculation of camp McCain is exemplary of our need for a transformative figure like Obama. McCain’s scurrilous ads acted in fact as an illustration of Obama’s promise. Through McCain’s dark and brooding accusations, it turns out he wasn’t campaigning for himself at all; he was campaigning for hope by spewing hopelessness. It is kind of like when you see a street proselytizer, your chances of converting to Christianity go down. Who wants to be with the crazies?

ben-in-harlem

As much as Obama won this election, and he did that beautifully, McCain lost it. He sullied the word Maverick. He became a caricature of cynicism and obsolescence. He became the epitome of a broken Washington. But what happens now? One thing that Obama has always said, something that we as a country must listen to now that he leads us, is that we as a people must come together, work together to create the country we want. It is up to us to create a sense of common purpose and direction. This election belongs to the people. It even belongs to those who would have preferred a different outcome. Obama is not a magic pill that will fix everything, but I believe he will move enough people to change the way we look at each other, and interact with one another. We have as much responsibility for America’s success as does President-Elect Obama.

Give A Shit

-FF


Obamawick- See Obama Mural Here

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President Barack Obama

November 4, 2008

VOTE

Obamawick- Barack Obama Graffiti in Brooklyn- Click Here

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Who is He? Penguin McCain Asks…

October 16, 2008

For those of you who have been preoccupied with this year’s election cycle, research has uncovered the true inspiration of the McCain/Palin campaign strategy. Yikes!

…The prescience is disturbing…

Obamawick Street Art

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…75,000 People…

May 20, 2008

Some people say they want a President not a rock star…
We say we want both…

Decemberists and Obama
Obama with the Decemberists

Click to See Obama Mural Graffiti in Bushwick Brooklyn

…75,000 People Strong…


Obama ’08

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Capitulation and Ascent

April 10, 2008

The Expectations of a Common Word…

Murder by Death
O’Death
Kiss Kiss

April 4th 2008
The Bowery Ballroom

Many shows have a consistency to them. It is typical that bands chosen for the lineup exist in the same sphere of style as one another. The Murder by Death show last Friday night was no exception. Yet the show underscored how artists that have similar components, influences, and style still produce different qualities of music. I was very excited to see Murder by Death. I do not enjoy their last two albums but I hoped to hear a few standards from their earlier work on Like the Exorcist, but More Breakdancing and Who Will Survive, and What Will Be Left of Them?. While I was not denied this opportunity, I was sadly disappointed by their performance. This show was all about expectations. What one would suppose would be a perfect pairing, turned out to be a bust. Murder by Death and O’Death, what could be better?

As for Kiss Kiss, I had no expectations for them. They set up their gear, played a fairly bland set, and then scurried along. Their hardcore distortions, violin, and synthesizers had all the makings of a fine zombie rock experience, but their Castlevania shtick, though cool in concept, didn’t mesh well with Joshua Benash’s power pop vocals. It wasn’t an excruciating first act to sit through, but no one likes to unwittingly walk into a My Chemical Romance show, thanks again Eyeball Records.

O’Death’s reputation is only exceeded by their actual performance. As they thumped into a psychotic Appalachian episode, the center of the crowd began flinging and throwing themselves into one-another. The romping and stomping looked and felt less like a mosh pit and more like a pagan festival, the majority of violence being committed by a group of skinny girls. The more brut-like characters in the crowd were only too happy to comply. Soon enough the entire audience was arm-in-arm, swirling up close and personal into a salacious hoedown. With their energy and style, O’Death certainly tops the list of bands to see in 2008.

Murder by Death’s loss of Vincent Edward and Alex Schrodt was the loss of the very elements that made the band worth listening to. Sure Murder by Death’s Americana appeal was something to be heard, but it was the contrast between their electronic fuzz beats with the organic tones of the cello and guitars that elevated the music. Adam Turla’s vocal were more aggressive and pointed before the loss of their percussionist and keyboardist. It is clear that they wanted a change of direction. The band reshaped itself to exploit Turla’s Johnny Cash drawl and adopted a rockabilly persona that unfortunately tramples all over the experimental qualities that made them relevant. Murder by Death receded into the blasé, they resigned to worthlessness and typicality, provoking the multitudes that once grinned at the clever nuances of I’m Afraid of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf to balk and confront the music with a resounding “So What!”

-FF

4/9

http://www.murderbydeath.com
http://www.myspace.com/murderbydeath
http://www.odeath.net
http://www.myspace.com/odeath
http://www.myspace.com/kisskiss

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Obamawick- Neighborhood Sheds Association

March 24, 2008

A local graffiti artist has tagged this awesome portrait of Senator Obama on the side of a brick wall on Grattan between Morgan and Bogart. If you want to check it out take the L train to the Morgan stop. It was evidently done in reference to one of Obama’s latest speeches titled “A More Perfect Union.”

No more Bushwick.

It’s Obamawick.

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Barack Obama in Philadelphia

http://my.barackobama.com/hisownwords

Check out the website Jump Because

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