Quote of the day: HAITI

January 19, 2010

On the occasion of Martin Luther King Day, Atlanta-based poet Franklin Abbott channels his friend and lover, the late Assoto Saint (pictured below):

Black is the Color

I go to Troublesome to mourn and weep . . .
— Scottish folk song popular in Appalachia

for Haiti
for Yves Lubin/Assotto Saint
beloved
your mother
has broken
her back
your father
died in your quiver
long before
you joined him
you beloved poet
Yves/Assotto
beyond time
whisper prayers
Rumi-like
a flute in the wind of my ear:
help my people
and the midnight art
of our magic
will set you
free



Photo diary: Home Ec class in Dumbo

January 18, 2010

Andy and Hugh between bouts of making masala in Home Ec class

Holly Mendenhall, our cooking teacher (of Unfussy Food fame), shepherded us through a multi-course Indian meal

Randall Chamberlain

Hugh and Randall, waiting for the man


In this week’s New Yorker

January 18, 2010

Two pieces in this week’s New Yorker caught and rewarded my interest. The major one was Margaret Talbot’s long, well-reported story on the Proposition 8 trial in California, which the lawyers working to overturn the law by judicial fiat hope to take to the Supreme Court and thereby eliminate the state-by-state wrassle over marriage equality. There’s a lot of controversy over timing and argument, but Ted Olson — the guy who argued for the government in the 2000 election debacle in Florida and who has signed on to the gay marriage cause big-time — thinks the case can win, because Proposition 8 “created three unequal classes of people in California: ‘The eighteen thousand or so gay couples who were already married got to remain married. But if they get divorced they can’t get remarried! Is that irrational, or what? Then you have heterosexual couples who can get married, and gays and lesbians who didn’t get married before Prop. 8 and now can’t.” Check out the whole article here.

Then there’s Michael Schulman’s Talk of the Town piece about the impending return to the spotlight of Pee Wee Herman, and not a minute too soon. (Andy and I watched the Pee Wee Herman Christmas Special a couple of weeks ago, a little stoned, and OMG, it is brilliant and subversive and crazy all at once. It’s as if Highlights magazine ran a feature called “Count the Gay Icons on This Prime-Time TV Special.” And when Grace Jones stepped out of a box with a slice of foam on her head to sing “The Little Drummer Boy,” my head nearly exploded. You can see it on YouTube here.) My favorite part of the short piece is when Paul Reubens talks about his real agenda with Pee Wee’s Playhouse: “The show was really about celebrating diversity and saying it’s O.K. to be different in any way that you’re different, period. In seventh grade, I remember meeting these art kids who were, like, ‘Hey, you got a minute? Sit down! Have you ever heard of nonconformity? Listen, this is what it is!’ And, meanwhile, I’m, like, ‘You’re kidding. You mean there are people who want to be different?’ ”


Photo diary: January 10, 2010

January 16, 2010

the tunnel to the #1 train at 190th Street

public art

who decides, indeed?


Haiti disaster relief

January 15, 2010

The situation looks grim, and even getting medical aid and emergency supplies into Port-au-Prince and distributed effectively will be difficult and compromised by inevitable human conditions. Nevertheless, I can’t look on and do nothing. I’ve made donations to two organizations with a lot of experience on the ground in these circumstances:

Partners in Health

Doctors Without Borders

Consider making donations today. Both these websites make it quick, easy, and safe.