Not This Fourth
Sorry. No fireworks and flags for me tonight. Not in the mood this year. At all.
Sorry. No fireworks and flags for me tonight. Not in the mood this year. At all.
I remember hearing this as a kid, and thinking that it didn’t sound like any music I’d ever heard before. It still doesn’t.
But each time I listen, my spirits rise, and that is a good thing in these perilous times - especially on a commemorative day like this one.
Dancers of the Bolshoi ballet following yesterday’s football match backstage during a performance of Raymonda
Photo via Bruna Gaglianone
I’ve been seeing more and more American flags attached to the cyclone fences on overpasses around Boston - multiple flags on each overpass, facing in both directions.
Does anyone know what message these flags are intended to convey, who puts them up, and whether they require permits?
42nd Street, New York, 1940, by Lisette Model. Her student Diane Arbus said Model taught her: "The more specific you are, the more general it’ll be."
I do a lot of walking in places where I have to compete for space with bicyclists, and some recent Democrat primary results - especially last night in New York - are beginning to give new meaning to a phrase I hear out there a lot: “On your left!”
Out walking on the Mass Avenue bridge this morning, and running into Keith Lockhart at the 180 Smoot marker.
is the Fourth Of July really next week already?
Because the United States didn’t qualify. And I like their uniforms best.
When you’re in Manhattan, moving around over and under the grid on your way to and from work, or on vacation, you’re aware of Central Park, but not really of its scope until you see photos like this one. And I doubt that anything of this scale could be accomplished in a city again.
Robert Moses disrupted and damaged the lives of thousands of people in the implementation of his various highway plans in and around the city and has rightly been held accountable, but he did protect and expanded the recreational opportunities available within this incredible space.
“Other governments have separated mothers and children.” (Michael Hayden)
A General Electric ad from 1940
"People will come to love their oppression, to adore the technologies that undo their capacities to think."
Aldous Huxley, pictured in 1936 by Cecil Beaton
"People will come to love their oppression, to adore the technologies that undo their capacities to think."
Aldous Huxley, pictured in 1936 by Cecil Beaton