Light/Breezes

Light/Breezes
SUNRISE AT DEATH VALLEY-Photo by Tom Cochrun

Sunday, February 13, 2011

POWER OF NEW MEDIA ON EGYPTIAN REVOLUTION


FASCINATING INSIGHT 
     As people in Yemen have begun to protest for change, CBS 60 Minutes provided a good interview with an architect of the Egyptian revolution.  
     Media and politics continue a seismic shift.  
     Wael Ghonim's 60 Minutes Interview: Egypt's New Age Revolution

Saturday, February 12, 2011

THE WEEKENDER :) BECAUSE IT'S ODD & FROM MOTO GROOVE

FROM THE EXOTIC VAULT OF 
MOTO GROOVE

     Cris Conner is a guy with a fertile mind to say the very least.  For years he presided over the airwaves and a team of inventive broadcasters creating a theater of the mind.  Cris is to broadcasting what Dali is to painting.  
     To listen to airchecks of his work and those of his teammates reminds you of a time when creativity, innovation and imagination mattered.  Full disclosure here.  I worked with Cris, also known to his fans as Moto Groove, for many years and was perpetually amused and surprised by what he did, said and the ideas he gave birth to.  He was a pioneer of FM rock, but it was much more than that.  It was about finding a niche in emerging lifestyles and growing it until it had become habitual in the daily routines of an ever growing audience.  It was always fun.  
      But what continues to amaze me is that Cris, who is a photographic artist of exquisite talent, can still find, see, spot and know things that mere humans can not.  From time to time he'll shoot me a link of something he has created or something he has found.  I am usually left amazed, laughing or simply shaking my head wondering what planet he is really from.  I offer this little ditty as exhibit A.
       Enjoy.  I'll bet you've not seen anything like this, short of a wild dream.



 GOODBYE TO A LEGEND
     It was impossible to be around auto racing since the 1950's and not to know Tom Carnegie.  He is best known as being the Voice of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. In that vast space, his was the voice booming over the speakers around the two and half mile track.  His style was unique and some of his patented phrases are famous. Tom died on Friday at 91.
     Like a lot of folks in broadcasting, Tom had a secret, his real name. Carl Karnegy was in a public speaking group back in the 1960's. So was my father Karl. They hit it off, starting with sharing the same name with a variation in spelling. I was a kid and more interested in playing ball than being aware of who was on radio or TV, but dad told me to pay attention to Tom Carnegie. In those days he provided sports on both radio and TV and was an early play by play announcer.  
     It was my pleasure to know Tom and to even work with him on a project or two. He left his mark and legions of racing fans have memories of the Indianapolis 500, enriched by Tom's voice. He was a pro.
       

Friday, February 11, 2011

SAY GOODNIGHT HOSNI & NOTHING LIKE THE TRAIN

DANCE LIKE AN EGYPTIAN
     It'll make for a fascinating story to learn what finally convinced Hosni Mubarak to go. As it was the story line could do nothing but deteriorate.  Mubarak's departure does not assure sunshine and roses, but a longer delay would have made it worse. (See an earlier post.)
      The US team working on the transition will take comfort from the long and friendly relationship between the US military and the Egyptian army. The US has trained most of the Egyptian officers, they have spent time in the US and in many instances there are genuine friendships between US and Egyptian brass.  At a time of change, when the military has been given authority, this is a good sign.
      In this moment of hope, I urge you to recall the song refrain from this Post's title and to imagine the former strongman- dancing like an Egyptian.  Better yet-recall Steve Martin's moves to "King Tut."  Bye bye Hosni.

SOUTHBOUND ON THE SURFLINER


      This post comes from the Amtrak Surfliner south bound to San Diego.  The shot whizzing by above is south of Santa Barbara.


We have become fans of the route and find this brand of train travel preferable, in most ways, to flying.  Seats and space are more comfortable, the views are terrific and you avoid the angst and hassle of airports, gates, lines, x-ray machines and etc.

If you drive, you might save 1-2 hours on the trip from the Central Coast to San Diego. The   operative word being DRIVE. That means in and around LA.  Been there and done that. Simply sitting back, reading, snoozing and watching the view is vastly preferable.

Now others can take the freeway. I'll take the free time. 
And, it's pretty difficult to blog while you drive.
See you down the trail.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

FILLING THE VOID & WHEN FRIENDS GATHER

THE EGYPTIAN WAIT

     Analysts can disagree on whether the sky is blue, so when you find convergence of opinion you pay attention.  The longer the Mubarak regime resists change, while a fervid anti Mubarak movement remains active, the more likely unfavorable trends can begin. Not the least of these is an impact on American influence.  
       The US is caught in a cross fire of interests.  Mubarak has been an ally, so we can not appear to throw him over.  Still, a timely, rational transition, acceptable to the masses and good for our strategic concerns is in our best interest.  The longer it festers, the more anger and resentment grows, the more appealing other elements will appear to those Egyptians who remain invested, emotionally, in the call for change. Those other elements are those who can both fan emotion and draw power from resentment and anger.  They include the Muslim Brotherhood.  The US must not publicly demean those who could assume power in a changed Egypt.  And that is tricky. The longer it remains a stand off, the more the US has to loose and the more the wild card players have to gain. 
      A defused situation, lowered voices, people going back to routine, less mass gatherings and media attention is a sound alternative, but who knows how that might play out, or who is in a position to steer it.  Certainly not the once peripheral voices, some extreme, who have been slowly gathering following in the mania.
      Thus, the alliance of thought by many western analysts.  Resolution, sooner than later is better. The options- demonstrations stop, Mubarak departs or lays out a framework for departure. Until then it is a wait, with uncertainty being the only beneficiary. 
NOW TO SOMETHING MUCH BETTER
FRIENDS AND FOOD
     Several months ago a group who share a love for food decided we would gather monthly and prepare new dishes, based on the theme of the month.  This month it was
Russian.

     As exotic aromas fill the hosting home, there is of course socializing and wine drinking-this is, after all, California.

and old fashioned ice crushing-a Russian theme meant some vodka of course
and the courses begin.  Here is the borscht and freshly baked Russian rye bread
another blast of activity in the kitchen
and a FULL PLATE.
Kasha Varniskas, lamb-raisin-bean Plov, beef stroganoff, Kartushnik with cheese and onions
and not pictured were the strawberries Romanov and Russian Tea cakes.
Cheers.
See you down the trail
we have calories to walks off.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

YEA, YEA, YEA

THE BEATLES INVADE AMERICA

      I was one of the 73 million Americans who were tuned into the Ed Sullivan show on February 9, 1964.  We needed it.  John Kennedy had been assassinated just 3 months earlier and we were hurting, especially  boomers and even more so, the class of 1964.  
     In those days we studied civics and/or government and JFK was the perfect touchstone or conduit to ignite our interest.  He was young, handsome, played touch football, took on challenges, like going to the moon and he turned government from something gray and old to something vital, alive and dynamic.  And then he was murdered.  It couldn't happen.  Not in America.  Not to our President.  Assassination was something from history not from a modern dynamic on the move America.  We were devastated.  Hope, dreams, inspiration, beliefs were all shattered by the insanity of Dallas.
      Then came the Beatles.  We'd heard their music on the radio.  It was unlike anything before.  We saw their pictures in Newsweek or Time and they looked different.  And then they appeared on the Ed Sullivan show.
     If you were not apart of the age, it may be hard to understand how a Sunday evening variety show could wield such an influence.  But it did and on this day in history it exuded more influence and impact on America than at any other time.  
     Beatlemania had begun.  It was hype to be sure, but there was also an innocence about it.  It was the first time the boomers were seen a major demographic block.  We were a group to appeal to, but also by the sheer force of our volume, we were a rising power.  That power would later awaken and move to matters of race, war and peace, changing popular culture and human rights, but on  February 9, 1964 we were kids with broken hearts and dashed hopes who suddenly found pied pipers who thrilled our hearts, moved our feet and bodies and presented something entirely new and exotic.  It was the mojo  we needed.
     From those hysterical moments with mobs outside the theatre, screaming and fainting girls, the music changed us and arguably began an influence on larger history.  The playlist that night was I WANT TO HOLD YOUR HAND, ALL MY LOVING, I SAW HER STANDING THERE, SHE LOVES YOU, TIL THERE WAS YOU. 
     They were different and on that night so were we.

      At the risk of legal peril, I share a series of shot I took from the MOMA in San Francisco during the Avedon exhibition.  You can see these elsewhere, but as a further tribute-
as Ed Sullivan said with a stiff bodied wave of the arm "HERE ARE THE BEATLES!"



     By the way, cameras were permitted in the exhibition. Sorry the capture is so poor.  These are just masterful studies of the four who led us from despair. Look at the eyes.
DAYBOOK


See you down the trail.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

CAN YOU IMAGINE WHAT IF TWITTER EXISTED IN THE 60'S

  MAKE TWEETS NOT WAR?

     No, I don't think so.  The original is so much more, healthy.  Still it makes for a great dinner party What If conversation.
        What would be the parameters of the May Day shutdown of Washington with social media? How would battlefield decisions in Viet Nam have been affected?  Woodstock? Watergate coverage?  Let your mind roll.
       I'm not a first line adapter, but I follow pretty quickly. I wait for those with better skills to get out, push the new technology and platform and learn from them.  
      I've been amazed at how quickly LinkedIn connections have grown, how advertising and marketing has evolved, how we can continue to organize streams of data and information flow. Twitter was vital in getting early information out of Egypt and apparently in organizing the demonstrations.
     So that makes this all the more preposterous.  Can you recall how you communicated in 1994?  Call this 1:30 video "What is the Internet anyway?"  


     Now repressive regimes seek to shut down those very forms of communication that even big legacy media utilizes, even if 16 years ago the anchor team didn't have a clue.  That also speaks volumes.  You run that conversation in your own mind.

REEL THOUGHTS
     When it is film or cinema, I like to think of myself as an early bird.  I love the medium and have for as long as I can remember, which is why there is always something I want to see or am more than happy to talk about.  
     You may recall several weeks ago my ecstatic thoughts about THE KING'S SPEECH.  Obviously I'm delighted with its trail of accolades.  I wonder why though, Lionel Logue's (Geoffrey Rush) adherence to Christian Science was overlooked?  It didn't need to be a significant story element, but I recall that scene when the Archbishop was so disdainful.  Just for the sake of historical "completeness" it seems to me there could simply have been a line to address it. I am not an advocate of Christian Science, not a critic either, but do love the complexity and nuance that real life bumps, twists and warts bring to storytelling.  Not a big thing, just a wonder why.  THE KING'S SPEECH is an extraordinary work.  
BASED ON THE TRAILER THIS LOOKS PROMISING
A hit at Sundance, it is beginning to get a lot of attention.  I'll be in one of those first lines.


WINTER CONTINUES TO DRAG ON IN MOST OF THE US
AND SO WE PROVIDE ANOTHER DOSE OF RELIEF IN 
DAY BOOK
SUN KISSES



AND UP CLOSE





See you down the trail.


Monday, February 7, 2011

INTELLIGENCE AND INFORMATION ON EGYPT

WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE, WHY
     The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs tells Jon Stewart, "everybody" was taken by surprise as events seemed to spread from Tunisia to Egypt, while the President is said to be unhappy with the intelligence community. 
      Mark Mazzetti wrote in the New York Times President Obama "criticized American spy agencies over their their performance in predicting and analyzing the spreading unrest."
      As American news organizations have scrambled to cover the story, they have understandably focused on the action in the street and the hints of reaction by the Mubarak regime.  Missing from most reporting and analysis has been the role inflated food costs have played in fueling the public discontent that has been fanned and focused by social media.
       It is ironic.  Power changing political foment brews and and then storms in a viral way, but the big tools of intelligence and the media don't see it coming, nor understand its nexus?
        On Thursday the Senate Intelligence Committee heard a White House intelligence official say the CIA had warned the Obama Administration late in 2010 that trouble was brewing.  "Instability....unsure of the trigger mechanism" were part of the CIA briefing.
        Intelligence agencies and news organizations suffer similar problems, namely an inadequate number of people on the ground, in the environment and capable of gathering information to feed a larger mosaic and understanding.  Both intelligence shops and news groups have great technological capacity, but it requires humans, or in the parlance humint-human intelligence- to begin to probe motivation or sequence.
        American news organizations used to have bureaus in many cities, with people who's job it was to understand which way the wind was blowing.  Intelligence agencies used to have more "spies" getting deeper into the fabric of strategic nations or powder keg environments. That was before staff reductions, budget cuts,  changed priorities.  All are inexcusable to the extent those reductions, cuts and priorities have undermined the flow of vital information.
         Political agenda also plays a role.  The US has enjoyed a 30 year relationship with Egypt.  Our military has trained theirs.  The Suez canal has remained safe. Egypt has played nice with our ally Israel, so we have ignored the shearing policies of Mubarak that have now come back to bite.  The American media was so out of touch with reality on the ground they were in no position to know of the festering roots until mass protests and civil disorder exploded.  At the risk of sounding like Yogi Berra, you can't see something if you ain't looking at it.
         I hope both the intelligence community and the big time media have learned
that hints of rage and the steam that may roil into a force to demand regime change can now be found in tweets and postings.  That should make it easier to see.