OP-ED NEWS: The root cause of the financial distress that the Postal Service is going through is overwhelmingly caused by Congressional mandates that were imposed upon the Postal Service. Congress passed the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act (PAEA), which was signed into law by President G.W. Bush on December 20, 2006. Under the guise of modernizing the Postal Service for the 21st Century, it actually doomed the Postal Service. If not for the PAEA, the Postal Service would be functioning fine even with the impact of email and the financial collapse of 2008. One of the provisions of the […]
SIDEWALKING: Bolt Thrower
Sky over Philadelphia, last night, by RAY SKWIRE
SH*T MY UNCLE SAYS: No More Pussyfooting, Barry
BY WILLIAM C. HENRY One of the biggest gripes I’ve had lately (like for the past three years) with this administration is its seeming total lack of an offense — the foresightful OR the reactive variety. As a matter of fact, at times it’s been enough to make this card-carrying progressive wonder just who’s side they’re on. Now, I know that a damn good defense can, and more often than not, does, win football games but unfortunately for us Democrats, history continues to prove that even an outstanding defense seldom if EVER wins in the political arena. To put it […]
IGGLES: The Week That Was
[Photo by SUNNYDAYZ87] BY MIKE WOLVERTON SPORTS GUY Today’s Eagles game got really boring in the 2nd half. The good kind of boring. As in no drama, no uncertainty, complete control. An Eagles win seemed so secure, but then you’d look at the scoreboard and see 24-13 and realize that the Rams were still within reach, even though it felt like it was over. This game reminded me of last year’s Week 2 contest at Detroit (Vick’s first start). On the road, in a dome, against a poor but improving team. If you remember that game from last year, you’ll […]
FRINGE REVIEW: Headlong’s Red Rovers
BY BRANDON LAFVING FRINGE CORRESPONDENT “Welcome to the Jet Propulsion Laboratories 2011 Rover Driver Conference,” said the nice lady manning what looked like a conference registration table scattered with name tags. “Oh, I must be in the wrong place; where is the theater showing Red Rovers?” I said. “You’re in the right place, believe me,” she said with a smile. “Name tags are on the table.” Huh? The table was lined with name tags; each had a name in NASA font, and not one of them belonged to me. “Excuse me; there must be a mistake. My name isn’t here.” […]
TONITE: TV Party
[Illustration by ALEX FINE]
JAZZER: The Madison Rast Quartet
BY ZIVIT SHLANK Stanley Clarke. Jymie Merrit. Derrick Hodge. Mike Boone. What do these cats have in common? They all play bass and all have roots in our City of Brotherly Love — and we all know Philadelphia and jazz have become practically synonymous. North Carolina native Madison Rast has steadily become one of the most in-demand sidemen in the 215 since making Philly home over 10 years ago. Tonight he will lead his own quartet for the very first time tonight at Moonstone Arts Center, aka the legendary Robbins Books in Center City, as part of Matthew Feldman’s monthly […]
EARLY WORD: Oh Brother Where Art Thou?
[Click to enlarge] FYI, tickets go on sale at 10 AM today for Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds at The Academy Of Music on November 11th. The rest of this article is HERE.
REVIEW: The National At The Academy Of Music
[Photo by JONATHAN VALANIA] BY COLONEL TOM SHEEHY Since its construction in 1857, The Academy of Music has been known as “The Grand Old Lady of Broad Street.” In 1872, it hosted the Republican Convention which renominated President Ulysses S. Grant and believe it or not, in 1889, a special wooden floor was installed for the first indoor football game in Philadelphia between University of Pennsylvania and Princeton. These days it enjoys a reputation as the most prestigious and acoustically-perfect room in the city to hear a live musical performance. Before the opening of the Kimmel Center, the Academy of […]
THIS JUST IN: Abandon Ship!
Downtown Wilkes-Barre in the aftermath of Hurricane Agnes in 1972 ASSOCIATED PRESS: Nearly 100,000 people were ordered to flee the rising Susquehanna River on Thursday as the remnants of Tropical Storm Lee dumped more rain across the Northeast, socking areas still recovering from Hurricane Irene and closing major highways at the morning rush. At Binghamton, N.Y., the wide river broke a flood record and flowed over retaining walls downtown. Interstate 88 was closed and emergency responders scrambled to evacuate holdouts who didn’t heed warnings to leave neighborhoods. About 80 miles downstream in Wilkes-Barre, the river was projected to crest later […]
RICK PERRY: Pro-Death
WILL BUNCH: I watched all of last night’s rather predictable and not particularly game changing GOP presidential last night. As the dust settles, I honestly couldn’t tell you who the “winner” was. I can tell you who lost, though: Basic human decency. Not to mention America’s reputation as a nation built on virtues like justice and fairness. This shocking new low came near the end of the debate when moderator Brian Williams of NBC News asked Texas Gov. Rick Perry to defend his record of executions — 234, more than any other governor in modern history — during his tenure […]
WHAT IF: Have Jobs Become Obsolete?
DOUGLAS RUSHKOFF: The Industrial Age was largely about making those jobs as menial and unskilled as possible. Technologies such as the assembly line were less important for making production faster than for making it cheaper, and laborers more replaceable. Now that we’re in the digital age, we’re using technology the same way: to increase efficiency, lay off more people, and increase corporate profits. While this is certainly bad for workers and unions, I have to wonder just how truly bad is it for people. Isn’t this what all this technology was for in the first place? The question we have […]
EARLY WORD: Whore And Piece
PW: It started on a dare. A totally absurd-sounding dare. “Henry IV: The Musical,” he said to me. “Uh, sure,” I replied, assuming that the idea would disappear within minutes. I’d heard a lot of Ben Kamine’s harebrained schemes years earlier when we were undergrads together at Penn—the kind related from a college freshman at 3 in the morning, the hour when college freshmen believe they have all their most brilliant ideas. “I’ll direct it,” Kamine said. “You’ll write the music. We’ll do it in the Philly Fringe. It’ll be amazing.” The idea was preposterous for any number of reasons: […]