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March 9, 2004

Waiting for Go-donkey

The meaning of life in one act. And to think I wasted six hours watching “Angels in America” on the outside chance I’d get to see a robed Roy Cohn playing the harp. Or a confused Ethel Rosenberg exclaim, “a dingo ate my baby!” …Speaking of baby-eating, I’m working to update to my blogroll. To do this, I had to take down a couple of my link lists. But they

Somebody needs a pickle

Uh, you peddle condiments, honey. Let’s not go confusing steak sauce dividends with political perspicuity, okay? Now go fix me up a burger. And hold the ketchup.

Well, there’s gotta be somebody left we can pander to…

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Four Democratic California lawmakers on Monday proposed giving teenagers as young as 14 the right to vote in a move that would make the often trailblazing state the first in the nation to do so. Under the proposal, youths under the current legal voting age of 18 would be able to cast ballots in state and local elections only, although their vote would not have full

Chicks dig a man who’s Hung

God bless freakin’ America.

“This water’s cold.” “Yeah, and deep, too.”

Well this is quite novel: a defense of molestation on the grounds of “Otherness.” Were he not dead, Eddie Said would be so proud! The meat: […]when asked whether a white priest fondling an Alaska Native boy would have an impact, positive or negative, Loyens [a retired Reverend who holds a doctorate in cultural anthropology] said the Athabascan Indian and Yupik Eskimo cultures were “fairly loose” on sexual matters. He

RIP

Actor Paul Winfield has died of a heart attack. He was 62. From Leonard Maltin’s Movie Encyclopedia, reprinted on IMDB: This imposing black actor first came to the attention of TV audiences opposite Diahann Carroll on the sitcom “Julia” from 1968 to 1971, and he’s done some of his best work on the small screen, especially as civil-rights activist Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., in “King,” a 1978 miniseries. Winfield’s