Number of the Day

43. The number of feet to which the Red River is expected to crest by the weekend, as Fargo, ND nears record flooding.

Thousands of volunteers who have been piling sandbags for days scrambled to add another foot to Fargo's dike protection... The city of 92,000 unveiled a contingency evacuation plan Thursday afternoon, but at least four nursing homes already had begun moving residents by then.

"A few of them said they didn't want to go. I said I'm going where the crowd goes," said 98-year-old Margaret "Dolly" Beaucage, who clasped rosary beads as she waited to leave Elim Care Center. "I'm a swimmer," she said, smiling, "but not that good a swimmer."
I love you, Dolly.

As many as 6,000 volunteers have endured below-freezing temperatures "in the race to sandbag to 43 feet. Leon Schlafmann, Fargo's emergency management director, said he was confident they would succeed by the end of Thursday."
"I was skeptical as far as volunteers coming out today, but they're like mailmen," Schlafmann said. "They come out rain, sleet or shine."

Schlafmann also said he is confident the dikes will hold even through several days of high water. "We might lose a neighborhood or a few homes, but we won't lose the whole city," he said.
Scary. Shakers in Fargo, as well as in Manitoba and Moorhead, Minn., and other affected areas, I'm thinking about you. Stay safe.

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NotRandom YouTubery

Sophs amuses herself and attempts to drive me berserk last night.

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Quote of The Day

"If I do something, there's a reason for it. Even, it may look like a mistake, a gaffe. There is a rationale, there's a logic behind it. ... I want to see what the landscape looks like. I want to see who yells the loudest. I want to know who says they're with me but really isn't. ... It helps me understand my position on the chess board. It helps me understand, you know, where the enemy camp is and where those who are inside the tent are. ... It's all strategic."—RNC Chair Michael Steele, on his run-in with Conservative Kingdouche Rush Limbaugh and other things that looked like gaffes but were, in actuality, just evidence that he is more awesome than the average human brain can perceive.

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I Write Letters

Dear Senator Bayh,

Since no one in your office has seen fit to give you the memo, I just thought I'd let you know that our state went blue in the last election.

Just an FYI.

Love,
Liss

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By the way...

...the Masters of Disaster, otherwise known as the Republican Party, are up to some nonsense, but I literally can't muster the energy to care enough to write about it, mainly because it's not serious enough to warrant even the minimal expenditure of brain power it takes to write sentences to string together words like "conservatives," "total," "fucking," and "morons."

This pretty well sums it the nature of their grandstanding idiocy, though:

As Democrats (along with Contessa Brewer) have a ball playing up the GOP plan's lack of detail, Politico reports that House Republican aides are already squabbling over whose boss thought it was a good idea to unveil a budget that lacked nearly all the essential qualities of budget-ness.

The whole post is worth reading, but this quote from "a GOP aide heavily involved in budget strategy" stands well on its own:
In his egocentric rush to get on camera, Mike Pence threw the rest of the Conference under the bus, specifically Paul Ryan, whose staff has been working night and day for weeks to develop a substantive budget plan ... I hope his camera time was gratifying enough to justify erasing the weeks of hard work by dozens of Republicans to put forth serious ideas.
If only the House Republican Conference were a reality show.
I wonder what they'd call it, since "Biggest Loser" is already taken.

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Wuh? Buh? Zuh?

I know women aren't supposed to "get" the Three Stooges or wev, because of the congenital birth defect known as "having a vagina," but I don't really think my utter perplexity in response to this has anything to do with my ladybits:

MGM and the Farrelly brothers are closing in on their cast for "The Three Stooges."

Studio has set Sean Penn to play Larry, and negotiations are underway with Jim Carrey to play Curly, with the actor already making plans to gain 40 pounds to approximate the physical dimensions of Jerome "Curly" Howard.

The studio is zeroing in on Benicio Del Toro to play Moe.
Okay, just to be clear, this is what we're talking about:


Which, you know, might actually makes some sense if we were talking about a biopic directed by Milos Forman, but:
The film is not a biopic, but rather a comedy built around the antics of the three characters that Moe Howard, Larry Fine and Howard played in the Columbia Pictures shorts.
Does not compute.

In good news, I guess this does mean there's still hope for my unoptioned screenplay, "Spicoli Visits Uranus."

It's a screwball comedy.

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Daily Kitteh





Shaker AnotherJennifer's lovely Ted, who died last week at nearly 19 years old.

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Today in the Economic Clusterfucktastrophe...

Geithner Calls for Major Overhaul of Financial Rules (emphasis mine):

The Obama administration on Thursday detailed its wide-ranging plan to overhaul financial regulation by subjecting hedge funds and traders of exotic financial instruments, now among the biggest and most freewheeling players on Wall Street, to potentially strict new government supervision.

The Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, outlined the plan Thursday before the House Financial Services Committee, where he got a decidedly mixed reception. He said the changes were needed to fix a badly flawed system that was exposed by the current financial crisis. Mr. Geithner, in his opening statement, called for "comprehensive reform. Not modest repairs at the margin, but new rules of the game."

"Very complex, very consequential, very difficult" Mr. Geithner called the changes that he said were necessary, and the sooner the better.


Included in the plan would be the establishment of one single agency "with responsibility for systemic stability over the major institutions and critical payment and settlement systems and activities."

To that end, Mr. Geithner said: "Financial products and institutions should be regulated for the economic function they provide and the risks they present, not the legal form they take," Mr. Geithner said. "We can't allow institutions to cherry pick among competing regulators, and shift risk to where it faces the lowest standards and constraints."
Naturally, the GOP is already moaning about this proposal, even in its nascent form, without a hint of irony that their plan, aka Project Deregulation: Gilded Age Reloaded, is what got us into this mess in the first place, so they really ought to just STFU at this point.

In good news, I'm glad to see the national discussion increasingly focusing on the institutional corruption in our financial system and moving away from stupidly simplistic finger-pointing at American homeowners, those legions of strawwo/men who all defaulted on mortgages because of wanton greed and totally not because of predatory lending, unemployment, medical bills, and/or some combination thereof.

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That's Entertainment! Big Stan Film Review

by Shaker BGK, who would like you to know that in addition to reading Shakesville, working as an engineer, and dreaming of David Boreanaz, he finds time to beat as many RPG villains as possible.

As any media-obsessed person will confirm, the new Blu Rays come out on Tuesdays, so I try keep an eye on DVDVerdict.com for info about new releases, which is where Rob Schneider's new movie, Big Stan came to my attention.

Rob Schneider has earned a less than progressive reputation for starring in awful movies like The Hot Chick and Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo, but Big Stan is his directorial debut, in which he himself takes the lead role, giving Schneider the opportunity to change course and provide something more humorous and egalitarian. But…no.

As Melissa wisely cautioned via email, Starbuck and I donned appropriate safety gear for the viewing of this cinema classic.


[A trigger warning applies for the rest of this article.]

Ostensibly, this movie's charming tale revolves around a real estate financier who commits fraud and "prepares himself" for his impending six month prison sentence. But really, it's nothing more than a vehicle for bigotry and rape jokes.

106 seconds into the film, Schneider's character makes a racist quip to a white woman about how "black men love white women." *wink* He also suggests that she wouldn't be safe. *wink* Oh Racism and Rape Jokes are just hilarious. So less than two minutes in and two things I find offensive right out of the gate. I am filled with glee. Starbuck is not amused either, and she chooses to chew on a rope-toy rather than watch the movie. I turn back to the movie just in time to see Schneider's character go into this monologue:
Everyone knows that black men can't get enough of white women, and don't think that a woman of your age would be safe from their advances. No ma'am, these big black bucks don't care whether you're young or old, skinny or fat, walking or with two wrinkled stumps right below your knees, they want your white flesh and they want it bad. Truth be told, I'm part black myself, and if it wasn't for my wife, I'd be bending you over the desk doing you doggie style right now. I can just imagine you there, all alone in your big condo, awash in a sea of negro cock.
The Goggles, they do nothing to protect us from the stupid.


At just under six minutes in, Schneider has managed to insert slams against women, blacks, gays, gypsies, Hispanics, poor people, and the physically challenged. Because making fun of different people is a river of laughs that Hollywood has not yet managed to run dry. At 12 minutes into the movie, Schneider's character has given several selfish reasons why he and his wife shouldn't have a child together. Because the women-want-babies-and-men-don't theme is yet another river of laughs that Hollywood has not yet managed to run dry.

It is at this point that Schneider proceeds to drive (drunk) to a gay biker bar and offer a $100 to a queer biker to talk to him about prison and the main thesis of the movie arises: As a short guy, he's likely to be raped in prison.

The scene in which he is informed of this likelihood by a gay man just so neatly fits into the predatory queer meme, I'm sure most people didn't even blink an eye at the suggestion.

As the centerpiece of the movie is now how Schneider can avoid being raped in prison, the word rape is subsequently thrown around like a Frisbee. Schneider's character's wife gets in on the rape panic and he tells her:
What's going to change, Mindy, is my anus going to grow teeth? So when I say to you, I will make myself unrapeable, I will be UNRAPEABLE.
Cue dramatic music and wife applause in the background.

The character then purchases steroids from a black swimmer, complete with the label "Chinese Olympic Swim Team" on them. He then goes to a tattoo parlor to ask, "Do you have anything you can tattoo onto my sphincter to make it less attractive?" We're only 15 minutes in people.

At 17 minutes into this hilarious Academy-Award destined film, Schneider's character asks his wife "to violate him for the first time, so it will be with someone he loves." He then shrieks out, "Oh the Horror!" Because, you know, any man who engages in anal intercourse must abhor it. No, there's no love for the pegging community here.

David Cassidy shows up and says things equally insipid and mysterious, such that Schneider takes him into his home so he can be Schneider's personal trainer, and Mr. Cassidy's character, "The Master," gets in a few misogynistic comments against the wife as well.

At 25 minutes into the movie, Schneider stops his wife from interrupting the master's latest training session (beating Schneier with a fiery stick) by saying, "Run along, honey, this is man stuff here."

[So this is the big super honking TRIGGER WARNING.]

At 28 minutes into the movie, Schneider wakes up his wife by screaming, "Big men with guns! They're coming inside, and they want to rape you. I'm sorry, honey, but they are gonna rape you." She starts to cry and collapses into her husband's arms. He comforts her and then looks her in the eye to tell her, "There, now that you know what I'm going through, maybe you'll be more supportive." I had to rewind the movie to make sure what I just saw, actually just happened. Because women aren't already keenly aware of what the threat of rape feels like. Because a woman needs her husband to create a false rape threat for her to consider what's it like.

More of that projection Melissa is always talking about. It is (most) men who need never consider the threat of rape in their entire lives without being submitted to an extraordinary scenario, not women.

So this is when Starbuck demanded this movie be turned off.


The one thing I took away from the movie was that the threat of rape was worse for Rob Schneider's character because it made him less than male. Truly, nothing worse can happen to a guy than to lose his manliness, and become in society's and his own eyes, a woman.

That's why we need Feminism, and we need it like Oxygen.

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Lost Open Thread


Last night's episode will be discussed in infinitesimal detail, so if you haven't seen it, and don't want any spoilers, move along...

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Shaker Gourmet: Paella and Molasses-Raisin Cookies

A delicious meal this week, courtesy of Shaker Constant Comment. First up is paella, which CC notes:

"Although there are as many varieties of paella as there are cooks in Spain, I originally got this recipe from Betty Crocker International Cookbook and slightly modified it over the years. Figure that it will take about 1-1/2 hours to complete; however, it's so easy and is all prepared in a Dutch oven in various steps. No muss, no fuss. Since this recipe is for about 8-10 people, it's a great dish to serve at a dinner party--and it always gets raves. (As an aside, years ago I used to lead Sierra Club canoe trips and we often made this for our group dinner on Coleman stoves in the middle of nowhere--that's how easy it is!)"

Paella

1/4 C olive oil
1-1/2 lbs skinless chicken breasts
1 medium onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, chopped
3 cups water
1-1/2 cups white rice (I don't recommend substituting brown rice)
1 16-oz can tomatoes
1 tsp salt
1 T paprika
1 T instant chicken bouillon
1/2 tsp pepper
1/8 tsp ground turmeric (or saffron, if you prefer)
1/2 tsp red pepper (or more if you'd like it hotter)
1 lb clean raw shrimp
1 15-oz can artichoke hearts, drained and cut up
1 10-oz pkg frozen peas
1 2-oz jar pimiento

Heat oil in Dutch oven until hot. Cook chicken over medium heat until brown on all sides (about 15 minutes). Remove chicken and, when cool enough to handle, coarsely cut into smaller pieces. Cook and stir onion and garlic in oil until onion is tender. Drain fat from Dutch oven. Stir in water, rice, tomatoes, salt, paprika, bouillon, black and red pepper, and turmeric. Add chicken. Heat to boiling; reduce heat. Cover, simmer 20 minutes.

Stir shrimp into the mixture--cover and simmer 5 minutes. Add artichoke hearts and peas; cover and heat until hot--5-10 minutes. Serve in large shallow baking dish; garnish with pimiento.


Dessert below...

Molasses-Raisin Cookies

1 C molasses
1/2 C sugar
1/2 C melted butter
3/4 C raisins
1/2 T baking soda
1/2 tsp cinnamon
5 T hot water
2 eggs
3 1/2 C flour

In a large bowl, mix ingredients in order listed. Drop by large spoonful on a cookie sheet--12 will fit to a sheet. Bake at 350 degrees for about 10 minutes. Make sure cookies are a little puffy when you take them off the sheet and cool on a rack. (appx 4 dozen cookies)
This is a 100 year old recipe from Constant Comment's Welsh great-grandmother.

If you'd like to participate in Shaker Gourmet, email me (include your Shaker name!) at: shakergourmet (at) gmail.com

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Radio Shakesville Update

It looks like somewhere in the neighborhood of 300 people have downloaded the first installment of Radio Shakesville so far. That's downright humbling. In all honesty I was expecting maybe 15 or 20 people to be interested. Thats it's 15 to 20 times that is mind-boggling. The only down side here is that my wee little b-movie website can't handle the traffic, and I am going to need to find another place to host the shows. But no worries, I've got that under control.

Just FYI, the show will be listed on iTunes (I'll provide that link with the next show). Also, I've a list of all music used in the show posted here, with handy links to purchase said songs, if you're so inclined.

As I mentioned in the podcast the next episode will focus on women in popular music (with a more appropriate title and release date TBD). And this is where I was thinking you could help. My hope is to make this a community project, much as this whole blog is a community made up of its posters, guest posters, readers and commenters. Here's all you need to do: Pick up the phone. Just call (641) 715-3900, extension: 44515 and leave me a message.

Tell me what female musicians/bands have inspired you, what song speaks to you, what moves you as a woman, a feminist, an ally. Or just request something. Don't feel obligated to leave your name, remain anonymous if you like. (And if you're shy, well, so am I, so is Liss, and if we can get outside our little introverted shells and let everyone hear us, maybe you can too. And if you truly can't, hey, that's okay.) Just call in. Say something. Say anything.

I want to create a document of women's voices, and how women, feminists, and their allies relate to music and the world around them, but I can only do that with your help.

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My View from the Ceiling

by Shaker J

Liss wrote about how personal accounts are important and I took her up on her offer of publishing guests posts telling our stories. Mine's a difficult story to tell, but I suppose that most personal narratives are. I want to share this because I never see stories similar to mine being told from the first-person perspective. I would rather share this story as my own than have it shared later by someone else recounting and reflecting on my experiences.

I have mental illness. Whether it's unipolar depression—my only actual diagnosis was 'acute major depression' or possibly 'major depression (acute)'—or bipolar disorder II, or whether there are undiagnosed illnesses thrown in, it's unclear.

I'm a poor patient; I lie to doctors (and loved ones who ask about my health, for that matter), usually by omission. I don't call when I say I will, nor call when there's a complication with something. Anxiety often keeps me from picking up the phone if the doctor calls. I also don't take my medication regularly. I have enough trouble taking meds for physical issues, meds which do not cause side-effects in me and only ever improve my quality of life and decrease my chances of dying young. When it comes to psychiatric drugs, well, all sorts of issues come together so that I don't take them.

Part of it is the stigmatization of mental illness and also the stigmatization of being treated for mental illness (consider the phrase "someone forgot their crazy pills this morning" or how the world at large treats people who need or are in therapy), part of it is that the few drugs that work for me have physical side-effects, and part of it is that I know my mind is working differently on the drugs. Who I am, how I think, how creative I am, how much energy I have, how well I can remember things, what sorts of things I care about.... I feel these are all different when I am on medication than when I am not. It's a serious identity crisis every time. Sometimes I find this worth it, sometimes I don't, and sometimes it doesn't even play a role; I just am not taking my medication, because I can not take my medication. When I've asked people to help me remember to take my pills every day, I end up resenting them, lying to them, and pushing them out of my life. Thinking about it now, it's probably mostly issues about autonomy when it comes to medication.

My doctor was always keen on telling me that when I'm in a state of depression, I am not seeing reality. I very much disagree with this, and I think it's also a major part of why it's so hard for me to accept the differences in cognition I feel when on drugs. Suggesting that what I experience when depressed is somehow not real feels dismissive, hurtful, and suggests to me that over half of my life, I have not been living in reality. I'd always decided it was easier to just listen silently when he talked to me than to argue, so that I could have access to drugs I wouldn't take and prescriptions I wouldn't fill.

In January of this year I had a major break-down. I can't even remember if I was actually taking my medication or not; I probably wasn't, and if I was it definitely wasn't at the prescribed dosage or regularity. I missed an appointment with my doctor because I was unable to get out of bed, unable to function beyond what it took to answer the phone when my boyfriend or parents called to tell them I was okay, just busy. I never registered for classes. I received several phone calls from my doctor and from people looking to hire me. I didn't answer any of the calls out of anxiety. I was paralyzed by fear from answering the phone, from talking to someone when the whole conversation wasn't on my terms, on my time-line. My doctor eventually called my emergency contact, who called me. I promised I'd call the doctor—and I did—but I had to leave a message and again couldn't answer the phone when he returned my call.

Mid-February I got a letter by certified mail. It took me two weeks to open it, and it was because I had to convince myself that it was a bill, and that bad things would happen if I didn't pay it. Rather than a bill, it was a death sentence.

My doctor told me that he was going to refuse to see me after a date in mid-March (it's been over a week since this date as I am writing this.) He stated that it was important for me to follow through on my treatment, and since I am not doing so, will not treat me. He suspects I am no longer taking my medication, but, if I am, don't stop them before seeing a new doctor. He suggested a PCP refer me to a new doctor, and he would be happy to provide my medical record to whichever doctor requests it. (His willingness to abide by the law is amazingly generous, I know.) I sobbed for days.

Since getting that letter, I've been in various states of freefall. I've lied to people I care about; no one knows I don't have access to the drugs I need, or that I don't have a doctor. Some people are aware I'm "looking for a new doctor" because I didn't like the old one, but I'm terrified to do so. How can I trust doctors after this experience? This isn't even the only time where I felt thrown under a bus by my doctor.

Beyond the trust issue, there's the investment issue as well; I really don't want to pay the money (or put in time) for a doctor who will just drop me because I am unable (or maybe just unwilling—at this point I'm pretty sure that for me there's not much real difference) to take care of my end of the treatment all the time. I did call one doctor's office the other day, but I was not allowed to talk to the doctor to see if he was a good match for me before making an appointment, and also would have had to wait three weeks before I could see him. The alternatives offered by the office were not ones I found acceptable or feasible. It sounds like a small hurdle, but in terms of my emotional well-being it was a wrecking ball.

Every day I suffer. My inner monologue provides me, unbidden, untriggered, with such gems as "I hate [anything/one I'm interacting with]," "I hate myself," "I hate my life," "I want to kill myself." Living with this for as long as I have, I've learned to ignore these thoughts, get rid of them, and not dwell on them. I go through periods where I hoard medications and knives, and periods where I don't. There are days where the only way I can get out of bed is by reminding myself I can't kill myself if I don't get up.

But the hardest part is seeing the people I love suffer. Knowing that my family, what friends I've held on to, my boyfriend all feel helpless, frustrated, and guilty because of my illness. Sometimes I pick fights because I know that I'd never kill myself if someone I love would blame themselves or feel guilty for their last interaction with me.

All that said, I'm usually not seriously suicidal, and am not right now; I've only ever made one real attempt, which was a failure, and all the other times I thought I'd seriously kill myself, through luck or warning sign behavior, I've been unable to go through with the plan. I'm afraid of dying. I'd rather get better than die. But I don't know if I can. I sabotage myself. I don't want to die, but I don't know that I really want to get better either. I recognize that's a product of my illness, but even when I've been on a medication that actually seems to work, it's never enough to make me think that that's a better alternative. I don't know what to do, and I'm scared, and I hurt. I sometimes consider going to a hospital, but knowing my track record, I know I'll lie and then I'll leave before I end up in a better place. I do keep barriers in place, give myself certain responsibilities that I know I won't shirk. But sometimes it's like trying to cling to the ceiling.

I hate when people talk about people not taking advantage of opportunities, or people not taking care of their own health. It's not that easy for all of us. I've been handed a ticket out of hell, but thrown it away, because, well, it's hell.

---------------------------------------

[Editor's Note from Liss: When J approached me about doing this post, one of the first things I wanted to establish was that she is not currently in critical crisis. She assured me she is not and now has support around her all the time: "I recognize that I need this and am keeping it in place." We've talked about her continuing treatment by finding a new doctor and resources. All along the way during this process, I've reassured her I would not be disappointed if she changed her mind; I gave her the option of posting with a closed comments thread, which she declined, and I have made clear that I will pull the post and/or close the comments thread if she feels triggered at any point.

Because she approached me, she was concerned that I may face blowback or have people question why I posted her piece. My response to that possibility is that part of the reason people with mental illness are stigmatized is because there's so much ignorance about what the reality of mental illness is; we can't change that if people with mental illness are not allowed to tell their stories. Because depression is a disease in which feelings of alienation and loneliness are frequently defining facets, the suggestion that its discussion, even when painful and sensitive, is unfit for a community space strikes me as cruel.

J is not in crisis, wants to share her story, feels neither pushed nor exploited, and knows she can ask me to shut down the post/comments at any time. She has also approved this note for publication.
]

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Our Healthcare System Sucks

If you can spare a few bob, Susie could sure use it. It's fucking criminal that anyone in the wealthiest country in the world has to walk around with a possibly-fractured ankle for a year and a half.

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ThinkProgress Fighting Back

In response to Bill O'Reilly's dissent-squashing based stalking of Amanda Terkel, ThinkProgress has mounted an email campaign to get Bill's advertisers to withdraw support from a show that participates in such unethically disgusting tactics.

The responses so far have been interesting. For example, AT&T thinks that the email campaign itself is harassment:

Mr. Coe from AT&T called to complain about our automated email campaign, saying it is "harassment." ThinkProgress noted that if he thinks receiving e-mails is harassment, he will surely think that stalking and accosting a person on vacation is outrageous.
Snap!

My favorite, though, has to be the response from Ford:
I agree with you about the rantings of the hopelessly pig-headed Mr. O'Reilly, recognize that I am just an innocent bystander in this email letter silliness. I work at Ford and support Ford, but have no idea how the decisions are made on where we advertise. Frankly, as a mainstream company, we advertise everywhere there are good ratings. That is not an endorsement of the show — that is recognition that people are watching the show. Don't know why they watch that mindless ranting. But they watch in droves. Welcome to America, I guess.
In other words: "O'Reilly is a huge fuckneck with a mindless bunch of idiot zombies for an audience. But they're a huge audience so we need to advertise there."

Update: Just to clarify, the above response is actually from a Ford employee speaking only for himself, and not on behalf of the company. Sorry for presenting it otherwise.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime

Cop Rock


Bonus video: Wealthy, white-collar workers busted in a coke sting break into song about how they're not "real" criminals in "Don't Mess With My Pursuit of Happiness."


Hard to believe this show didn't have the staying (and replicating) power of Law & Order.

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The proof is in the budget…

Cross-posted from AngryBlackBitch.com.

The fillet-o-fish budget jingle is now floating around this bitch’s brain.

Sigh.

And I’m not even a fan of fillet-o-fish sandwiches!

Damn Lent-based fish advertising.

Ugh.

Let’s jump right on in, shall we?

A certain Meredith from Columbia Missouri (wassup, Columbia!) sent this bitch an email asking why I haven’t blogged about the federal budget battle and what my thoughts are on the Missouri state budget drama. Well, the reason a bitch hasn’t blogged about the federal budget drama is because I’ve been spending hours tracking the Great Bleed Out Missouri Budget Massacre of 2009 that is our state budget battle and trying to make sure the fiendish knaves in the majority in Jefferson City don’t eliminate programs that make my autistic brother’s world function.

I’ve got to tell you, this battle is fucking fubar. Not only are the budget fiends hacking flesh away from necessary programs but they are refusing federal stimulus money that would make cuts unnecessary and that are designed to…well, give the struggling masses a fucking break so we can get about the bitness of recovering from Blunt Trauma and the ravages of Bush-o-nomics.

The proof, my friends, is in the budget.

Allow me to rant.

***steps up on box of soap***

Knavish state Republicans are cutting $58 million dollars from the Department of Mental Health budget…on top of $20 million in cuts proposed by the Governor. DMH services are crucial to people like my brother, who is profoundly autistic and who has already suffered from the series of cuts made to programs over the past several years. People with developmental disabilities are Missourians…and most of their families will not be able to make up the difference. People with developmental disabilities participate in our communities and society…they don’t just languish away in institutions and they aren’t a population lawmakers can simply dismiss because they want to pander to some political theory that social programs don’t benefit society. And this sister of an autistic adult can promise those knaves that nothing good will come from cutting necessary programs whilst indulging in a federal stimulus refusal game.

Ugh!

Missouri seniors organized a paper plate mail-in action to the knaves that resulted in them backing off cuts that would have damn near eliminated a meal delivery program. That shit was fantabulous, but someone ought to be shamed that people have to resort to mailing thousands of paper plates to Jefferson City to make elected officials consider their hunger while they fling axes about in a conference room.

Lawd, I can just see it…a gaggle of more ambitious than inspired craven assholes hovering the starved body of the state budget, laughing as they hack of limb after limb while federal stimulus dollars lay in a corner, bound with duck tape over the mouth struggle to get free.

Mercy.

And someone needs to tell me how the same legislative body that voted for another abortion restriction bill and refuses to even consider prevention bills can walk about the people’s house without shame after then voting to strip funding for children’s services that would have, among other things, funded insurance coverage for some 27,000 Missouri children when families need that coverage more than ever.

Heaven to hell and back again, that just ain’t right…it ain’t logical…and it sure as shit ain’t pro-family.

Sigh.

So, Meredith, a bitch has been busy contacting my legislators and writing letters and waking up at 3 o’clock in the morning fretting and calling legislators because this state shit is where the stimulation of the nation will certainly fail if the head knaves in charge are allowed to get away with cutting instead of innovating and thinking outside the box and protecting the most vulnerable residents of the state.

We the people need to multi-task on this shit…stat! Because these fools are fixin' to make Limbaugh’s dream a reality one state at a time.

***steps down, sends another letter explaining how DMH cuts will fuck up the world, and logs off to go to work***

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Where My Wild Things At?

1. Where the Wild Things Are was one of my favorite books as a mini-blogginz. 2. I'm a sucka for Spike Jonez movies. 3. I'm wearing an Arcade Fire* shirt, like, most of the time.

So I'm pretty much jizzing! in! my pants! over this trailer.


It's really sad and haunting and grown-up, instead of the kids' movie I feared it might be. I kept reading people saying that the footage was really emotional, and I thought, "How emotional could it be?" and then I watched the trailer, and I saw exactly what they meant.

* Arcade Fire's "Wake Up" is the song playing in the trailer.

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Question of the Day

What's your favorite feminist film?

I don't know if it's strictly my favorite of all time, but one of the first that always comes to mind is the film I mentioned earlier today, Norma Rae, for all the reasons elucidated in Shaker AmberL's review.

KennyBlogginz, who has arrived for LOOOOOOOOOOOOST!!!11! Night, throws in a vote for Iron-Jawed Angels.

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Quote of The Day

"I want his policies that I believe take us in the wrong direction to fail."—Former GOP presidential challenger and someone about whose opinion no one has any reason to give a shit Fred Thompson, adding his voice to the chorus of Republicans who hope President Obama, oh, excuse me, his policies fail.

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