Linda Ronstadt Gets Dixie-Chicked

She’s ejected from the Aladdin casino in Las Vegas after calling Michael Moore “a great American patriot” and encouraging people to see Fahrenheit 9/11.

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Terrorist Dry Run, or Band on the Run?

Blogs have been chattering since last week about a woman named Annie Jacobsen, who wrote a terrifying account of flying Northwest Airlines 327 from Detroit to LA on which she was convinced she saw either an aborted terrorist attack or a dry run for a terrorist attack. Several bloggers have now published rebuttals, one from the federal air marshal quoted in her article, confirming that the men were interviewed, and turned out just to be members of a musical band.

However, the two bloggers most frequently cited, Michelle Malkin and Donald Sensing, are both (to simplify things) right-wingers. Malkin is a contributor to Fox News who refers to pro-choice people as “pro-death”. Meanwhile, Sensing links approvingly to Reagan propaganda and believes that “much of the impotence of the modern North American churches in wider society is rooted in the presentation, theologically and visually, of a ‘sissified Jesus.'”

They also misidentified her as a psychic (Malkin corrected herself by publishing a note Jacobsen’s parents wrote her). So it’s not really clear what’s going on, nor is it clear whether the right is approving (of the racial profiling Jacobsen espouses) or disapproving (of the portrayal of a dangerously lax homeland security policy). But the bloggers do raise some good questions.

Update

Snopes has labeled this a hoax, and links to a blistering column by Salon’s “Ask the Pilot” columnist, Patrick Smith.

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Download this!

Well, I saw the future of music last night from a front-row seat at a Prince concert. And I’m not talking about the show; it was brilliant but mostly a retrospective revue, including performances by Morris Day and Sheila E, with everyone looking exceptionally good for their age.
Read more: Maybe this is a business model…

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Used books: Illegal?

The New York Times on Monday ran an article comparing Amazon.com’s used book marketplace to Napster. The fact that you can use this service to find used copies of almost any book (or CD, or whatever) worries authors and publishing consultants. One of the latter said, “Used books are to consumer books as Napster was to the music industry.”

Is that a fair comparison?

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Moore misbehavior

Michael Moore has been bashing Pete Townsend in interviews for refusing to allow “Won’t Get Fooled Again” to be used in Fahrenheit 9/11. (It would have been used in place of Neil Young’s “Rockin In the Free World” at the very end of the film, following Bush’s “Fool me once…” quote.) But according to Townsend, that wasn’t what happened. Townsend says he was initially concerned because he felt Bowling For Columbine was a “bullying film,” and points out that “Won’t Get Fooled Again” is neither an anti-war song nor a rallying cry for an election. (And Moore himself expresses discomfort with the line, “Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.”) Townsend concludes,

I greatly resent being bullied and slurred by [Moore] in interviews just because he didn’t get what he wanted from me. It seems to me that this aspect of his nature is not unlike that of the powerful and wilful man at the centre of his new documentary.

Is it inevitable that anyone capable of expressing appropriate outrage about what’s going on must also indulge in some of the sins of the people who make us so angry?

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It Can’t Happen Here

And so it begins:

American counterterrorism officials, citing what they call “alarming” intelligence about a possible Qaeda strike inside the United States this fall, are reviewing a proposal that could allow for the postponement of the November presidential election in the event of such an attack, NEWSWEEK has learned.

Sinclair Lewis’ 1935 novel It Can’t Happen Here is an overwrought alternate-future novel about the rise of a fascist state in the U.S. Written during an era where a significant portion of the American right saw nothing wrong with fascism, it was soon overtaken by events and nowadays seems farfetched and silly. Doesn’t it?

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It’s the possessive, stupid!

Can someone explain to me how a glaring grammatical error — “there was nothing where it’s face should be” — makes its way from a professional writer with a dozen published novels, to one of the biggest SF magazines in the field, to page three of The Year’s Best Science Fiction anthology?

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Here’s your “straight face” test…

There’s an arrogance in the scientific community that they know better than the average American.
— Andrea Lafferty, executive director of the Traditional Values Coalition, in the New York Times today.

So which bridge do you want to walk across: the one I drew on the back of my placemat last night at the Hope and Anchor Diner, or the one designed by an engineer who thinks he knows better than the average American?

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No Artificial Cows Here!

A new brand of milk has shown up in the local bodega lately, Cream-O-Land. Their label design somewhat resembles the organic milk brands, and proudly proclaims, FROM REAL COWS. As opposed to…?

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NYC Journalism

Well, in the aftermath of the Post’s exclusive coverage of Kerry’s VP choice yesterday (see the Daily News’ chortling about the gaffe; the Times also reported that News reporters sent a bottle of Australian wine to the Post along with the note, “Congratulations on your exclusive: Have a nice day.”) my first newspaper boss, and the guy who taught me that the bulk of investigative journalism (at least in the pre-web days) was rolls of quarters, copy machines, and dusty file cabinets, had a great column with some suggestions for the new CUNY graduate school of Journalism. The deal? Free tuition and free housing,

but only if they promise to stay in town for the next five years and irritate those in power. In the process, they will overcome the stereotype that A.J. Liebling once wrote about the media: “You can buy most reporters in New York with a beer and a cheap steak.”

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