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My Internet Radio Playlist, 5/21/13

By Jack Silbert on May 21, 2013

EPISODE #77: MEMORIES

The Who — “Happy Jack” [THEME]
Johnny Thunders — “You Can’t Put Your Arms Around a Memory”
Of Montreal — “I Can’t Stop Your Memory”
Baker Knight — “My Memories of You”
Beat Happening — “In My Memory”
THe Mountain Goats — “You or Your Memory”
The Mockers — “Selective Memory”
Deerhunter — “Memory Boy”
The Shangri-Las — “Remember (Walkin’ in the Sand)”
The Duke & the King — “Still Remember Love”
Dolly Mixture — “Remember This”
Prefab Sprout — “I Remember That”
The Zombies — “Remember You”
Jens Lekman — “And I Remember Every Kiss”
The Kinks — “Do You Remember Walter”
Liam Finn — “Remember When”
John Leyton — “Johnny Remember Me”
The Doors — “Peace Frog” (in memory of Ray Manzarek)

broadcast live from Hoboken, NJ, on “Jack’s Aquarium”
Tuesday, 5/21/13, 10:00-11:10 a.m. eastern time

Posted in internet radio playlists | Tagged Baker Knight, Beat Happening, Deerhunter, Dolly Mixture, Jens Lekman, John Leyton, Johnny Thunders, Kinks, Liam Finn, Mountain Goats, Of Montreal, Prefab Sprout, The Doors, The Duke & the King, The Mockers, The Shangri-Las, The Zombies, unpopular music | Leave a response

If I Win the $600 Million Powerball Jackpot

By Jack Silbert on May 18, 2013

Back in late November, for the $550 million Powerball jackpot, I was still reeling from Sandy recovery when I made up my winnings wish list. Now, with tonight’s $600 million jackpot, I have a much clearer head. So this time, if I win, I will…

• Go see fancy 3-D version of new Star Trek movie; loudly complain about “irony of one-dimensional characters” until thrown out of theater.

• Make long-distance prank calls to all those A.P. reporters.

• Hire the creators of The Office to make yet another montage of Jim and Pam’s storybook romance, then hurl it into the ocean.

• Collaborate with bio-tech scientists to invent lettuce secretly made out of ground beef; pull a fast one on my vegetarian friends.

• Build time machine, travel to year 8000, see if “Forever” stamps are still valid.

• Purchase rights to Indianapolis 500 and Belmont Stakes; hold them simultaneously on same track.

• Buy 600 million scratch-off tickets.

• Start a Kickstarter campaign that just says “Eh, keep yer stinkin’ money.”

• Rent out Westboro Baptist Church for a gay wedding.

• Go up to next street person I see and deliver stirring pep talk about never giving up on your dreams; get whisked away in 16-foot Hummer limo before I get any poor-person germs on me.

Posted in satire | Tagged Powerball | 1 Response

Movie Review: The Great Gatsby

By Jack Silbert on May 15, 2013

3.5 stars out of 5

OK, this book, I did read. In high school, so I don’t really remember it very well. Except there was a green light, which was, you know, an example of symbolism.

Boy, people really hated this movie before anyone had seen it, huh? Me, I was torn. I’m a pretty big Leonardo DiCaprio fan. And I’d never seen any of the previous Gatsby film adaptations. But, I’m not a particular Baz Luhrmann aficionado. In fact, the only movie of his I’d seen is Romeo + Juliet (also starring my man Leo), which I’d seen in the theater with one of my own Daisy Buchanans. So much time has passed that I’ve actually met someone named Baz since then. But I do not recall liking that film.

So I made a deal with myself: I’d go see Gatsby, but wouldn’t spring for the 3-D. Looked splashy enough already, right?

And… I gotta say… (shhh, don’t tell anyone)… I kinda sorta liked it.

Sure, it took some getting used to. This is not a realistic depiction of the 1920s. It’s highly, highly, highly stylized, practically a cartoon. Luhrmann likes brash, bright colors contrasted with super drab colors. OK, we get it. Long curtains keep billowing in the wind. This often looks like a commercial for some high-end terrible vodka. And he keeps hitting us over the head with those eyes from the cover of the book. (They’re on a billboard here that characters keep driving past. Come on, Baz, don’t distract us from that green light!) Also, he tosses in a lot of hip-hop and dance music (Jay-Z is inexplicably an executive producer; the ghost of F. Scott Fitzgerald is still wondering what “H to the Izzo” means). Fine, whatever, it’s Luhrmann’s interpretation—but the 20′s had some pretty awesome music of its own.

What saves the day are the rock-solid main characters and plot which Luhrmann doesn’t F with (F. Scott?), and yet another knockout performance from DiCaprio. He’s a bit old to play Gatsby but still boyish enough to pull it off, and those lines around Leo’s eyes hint that something may be rotten in West Egg. (Last one into the pool is a…) Leo has never looked more like a capital-M, capital-S Movie Star and it fits Jay Gatsby to a T. And yet DiCaprio is also able to show us Gatsby’s self-doubt, eagerness to please, and cockeyed/delusional sense of hope.

Tobey Maguire (not Elijah Wood) does very good work as Nick Carraway, another superb Fitzgerald creation: entranced but grounded all at once. Other actors/characters don’t fare quite as well. Carey Mulligan is in full pouty-little-girl mode as Daisy. Joel Edgerton tries so hard to maintain an American accent, he doesn’t have time to do much else as Tom Buchanan. Isla Fisher’s role probably should’ve gone to any attractive young actress more in need of a film credit. Jason Clarke was really good in Zero Dark Thirty but here only gets to make anguished facial expressions.

But the movie generally looks great, never drags, and when all is said and done, you can’t help but appreciate the influence this nearly 90-year-old tale has had on our culture ever since. Don Draper is Jay Gatsby. Norma Desmond was an alternate version. Howard Hughes was a bit of Gatsby in real life (hey, Leo played him too). And maybe we’ve all had that Daisy Buchanan who got away. So we have to quietly admire the person who sets up shop across the bay, absolutely assured he can get her back.

Posted in movie reviews | Tagged 10s movies, Baz Luhrmann, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Leonardo DiCaprio, The Great Gatsby | Leave a response

My Internet Radio Playlist, 5/14/13

By Jack Silbert on May 14, 2013

EPISODE #76: ASK JACK, INSTALLMENT 6

The Who — “Happy Jack” [THEME]

Question from Miriam:
If you pee in the sea, does it attract sharks?
Post-answer song:
Morphine — “Sharks”

Question from Matt:
For the past several days, my Facebook page has alerted me the “Jack Silbert recently added 40 friends. Do you know any of them?” Today, it told me that “Jack Silbert recently added 39 friends.” Did one of them not take? Or did you add ANOTHER 39 friends? Inquiring minds want to know!
Post-answer song:
The Wedding Present — “You Should Always Keep in Touch With Your Friends”

Question from Christy:
What is the opposite of posthumous?
Post-answer song:
The dB’s — “Before We Were Born”

Question from Theron:
Why squirrel hate me?
Post-answer song:
Squirrel Bait — “Kid Dynamite”

Question from Joan:
I don’t understand this. Sometimes, when i go into a shopping establishment to purchase an item and I am waiting in a line to pay–when it is my turn, I hear, “May I help the following GUEST?’ If I was really a guest, then I would have been invited into the establishment and I wouldn’t have to pay for my item. That is how you treat a guest. Now this happens at all types of stores from Duane Reade to Dean & Deluca. It can be a food store, drug store, clothing store, hardware store, etc. I’m not sure of the exact question, but you get the idea.
Post-answer song:
Leonard Cohen — “The Guests”

Question from David:
Is the merci for me or is it just my inflated ego thinking that this is personally directed to me?
Post-answer song:
Jonathan Richman — “Give Paris One More Chance”

Question from Carli:
Jack, I know you’re a big fan of musical theater. Who are your picks for this year’s Tony Awards?
Post-answer song:
Eddie Foy Jr. and Reta Shaw — “I’ll Never Be Jealous Again” (from The Pajama Game)

Question from Patrick:
The ‘Tastes Great’ vs ‘Less Filling’ debate persisted for what seemed like years with no definitive answer to this age old question. So who won the debate in the end?
Post-answer song:
Bob Wills & his Texas Playboys — “Bubbles in My Beer”

Question from Audrey:
How can I, as a devoted Mets fan, maintain an upbeat and positive attitude for my team as I watch them score no runs and lose game after game?
Post-answer song:
Yo La Tengo — “Meet the Mets”

Question from Dave:
What was Chris Kelly’s cause of death?
Post-answer song:
The Clean — “Are You Really on Drugs”

Question from Caren:
Do you think you’ll ever move to the suburbs?
Post-answer song:
Pet Shop Boys — “Suburbia”

Question from Allan:
Why do wet shoes dry faster with newspaper in them than without newspaper in them?
Post-answer song:
Tsunami — “Newspaper”

Question from Anastasia:
How did the internet cat craze start?
Post-answer song:
Margy Pepper — “Little Cat”

Question from Rich:
What is the greatest song ever written? Here Ian McCulloch makes the case for his own.
Post-answer song:
Echo & the Bunnymen — “The Killing Moon”

Question from Brian:
I like to imagine that my succulents and cacti enjoy the music I play at home. If you had to venture a guess, which song would my plants like most?
Post-answer song:
The Friends of Dean Martinez — “All the Pretty Horses”

broadcast live from Hoboken, NJ, on “Jack’s Aquarium”
Tuesday, 5/14/13, 10:00-11:50 a.m. eastern time

Posted in internet radio playlists | Tagged advice, Ask Jack, Bob Wills & his Texas Playboys, dB's, Echo & the Bunnymen, Eddie Foy Jr., Friends of Dean Martinez, Jonathan Richman, Leonard Cohen, Margy Pepper, Morphine, Pet Shop Boys, Reta Shaw, Squirrel Bait, The Clean, The Wedding Present, Tsunami, unpopular music, Yo La Tengo | 4 Responses

Movie Review: What Maisie Knew

By Jack Silbert on May 10, 2013

4 stars out of 5

Does Maisie know that I’ve never read any Henry James? Anyway, I have no idea how closely this movie was based on his 1897 novel. (And yes, I just looked up the year on Wikipedia.) But I liked the movie a whole lot.

Far and away, the star of the movie is 6-year-old Onata Aprile as Maisie, and she is outstanding. Between this and the two kids in Mud, I am furious about the ridiculous representation of a child in Iron Man 3. Onata proves that kids can be subtle, they can be complex, they can be real. And she’s six freaking years old!

Maisie’s parents don’t like each other very much. Her mom (Julianne Moore) is wildly manipulative and a “queen bee”; her dad (Steve Coogan) is aloof, shallow, and simply not around. Not getting the affection she needs at home, Maisie reflexively seeks it from her parents’ post-split lovers (Joanna Vanderham and Alexander Skarsgård). Hey, I got that thing over the “a” on my first try!

This is a quiet, small movie, and not a whole hell of a lot happens. It’s like we’re watching a badminton match as Maisie gets shuttled back and forth in shared custody. In a quick indictment of society, almost every time Maisie meets up with one of her parents, they are in the middle of a phone call. Maisie, meanwhile, learns to adjust, adapt, and keep going.

It’s not a perfect movie, mind you. Somewhere in the middle I thought, “Huh, good thing this isn’t a modern story, or those two characters would hook up.” And, uh, guess what happens. And as much as I love Julianne Moore, it was hard to buy her as a rock star. A bit old for the part, maybe; had to keep thinking about Lucinda Williams. But kudos to the hair stylist who definitely makes Maisie look like a rocker’s daughter (and a pint-sized Suzi Quatro). And still, the age differences on display set up a nice three-generation perspective that adds another layer to the proceedings: cynicism, hope, wonder.

The performances are overall pretty strong. Coogan turns in yet another flippant prick. Vanderham comes across like a kinder, gentler (and Scottish) Elisha Cuthbert. Alexander Skarsgård (who is not Stellan Skarsgård or Peter Sarsgaard) is especially likable; his character’s friendship with Maisie is one of the strongest aspects of the movie.

But it all comes back to Onata Aprile. She animates Maisie by turns with joy, sadness, worry, weariness, and empathy. Never over-the-top, never using puppy-dog eyes to yank at our heartstrings. To sum it up in a bad pun: Amazing.

Posted in movie reviews | Tagged 10s movies, Henry James, What Maisie Knew | Leave a response

My Internet Radio Playlist, 5/7/13

By Jack Silbert on May 7, 2013

EPISODE #75: MOTHER’S DAY

The Who — “Happy Jack” [THEME]
The Beatles — “Your Mother Should Know”
They Might Be Giants — “Call You Mom”
Fountains of Wayne — “Stacey’s Mom”
Queen — “Tie Your Mother Down”
The Id — “Boil the Kettle, Mother”
The Police — “Mother”
Roy Orbison — “Mama”
Mull Historical Society — “Oh Mother”
The Baseball Project — “Look Out Mom”
Bobby Bare Jr. — “A Storm, A Tree, My Mother’s Head”
Morrissey — “Mama Lay Softly on the Riverbed”
Chocolate Genius — “My Mom”
Bruce Springsteen — “Mrs. McGrath”
John Lennon — “Mother”
Paul Simon — “Mother and Child Reunion”
The Intruders — “I’ll Always Love My Mama”

broadcast live from Hoboken, NJ, on “Jack’s Aquarium”
Tuesday, 5/7/13, 10:00-11:20 a.m. eastern time

Posted in internet radio playlists | Tagged Beatles, Bobby Bare Jr., Chocolate Genius, Fountains of Wayne, John Lennon, Morrissey, Mull Historical Society, Paul Simon, Queen, Roy Orbision, The Baseball Project, The Id, The Intruders, The Police, They Might Be Giants, unpopular music | Leave a response

Jack’s Haul

By Jack Silbert on May 6, 2013

Posted in satire | Tagged CVS, haul videos, shopping, the bachelor life, the single life | Leave a response

NRA and NBA: Similarities and Differences

By Jack Silbert on May 5, 2013

This weekend, the National Rifle Association held its annual convention in Houston, Texas. Meanwhile, the National Basketball Association playoffs are in full swing. With their similar acronyms, it can be easy to confuse the two organizations. I’ve prepared this easy-to-digest chart to help you distinguish them.

SIMILARITIES
• In favor of shooting
• In favor of strong defense
• Singing of National Anthem before every event
• The word “perimeter” comes up a lot
• Much attention paid to young African American men

DIFFERENCES
• Must be at least 19 years old the year you join the NBA
• Both have a guy named “LaPierre” (whoops, sorry, that’s the NHL)
• Not all of the NBA’s gay dudes are in the closet
• NBA has supporters in major cities
• Washington Bullets changed their name because it was stupid

Posted in satire | Tagged NBA, NRA | Leave a response

Escape From Desire, episode 1

By Jack Silbert on May 3, 2013

I was aware of Stephen Vesecky’s band #Poundsign# well before Stephen and I became good friends. We recently sat down for a wide-ranging conversation involving much silliness and a little bit of wisdom. At the end, we duet (!) on a Smiths classic. In theory, this is the first episode of a new podcast, Escape From Desire. But after this gauntlet has been thrown down, Stephen will be hard-pressed to deliver another of remotely similar quality.

Click to listen:
Escape From Desire, episode 1: Stephen Vesecky and Jack Silbert

Posted in shameless self-promotion | Tagged #Poundsign#, Escape From Desire, Stephen Vesecky | Leave a response

Movie Review: Mud

By Jack Silbert on May 2, 2013

3.5 stars out of 5

For us long-time Matthew McConaughey fans, there is an unspoken but teased-at subplot in Mud: Will he or won’t he take his shirt off? The shirt gets a lot of mentions. It’s a lucky shirt. It’s one of two things protecting him. He will not part with that shirt. But we McConheads know better, don’t we?

But don’t let all that distract you from another excellent performance from Mr. McConaughey. He takes his classic ultra-laid-back charmer and tweaks it just so: He’s desperate, he’s afraid, and maybe he’s a little bit bad.

As terrific as McConaughey is, the movie really belongs to young Tye Sheridan, who plays Ellis. He and BFF Neckbone (the also great Jacob Lofland) are classic small-town 14-year-olds and you totally believe them. Caught between the little-kid years but not yet ready to run with the big-dog teens. Early stirrings of feelings for girls. But still, the very best thing is going exploring with your buddy. In Stand by Me they went in search of a dead body; in Mud it’s a boat in a tree. And they get McConaughey in the bargain, intriguing guru or…?

That “boat in the tree” is the sort of quirky touch/representative image you might find in an excellent short story. And for a long time this film maintains a small, literary, coming-of-age feel. There’s much food for thought here: The idealized view of love held by a tween contrasted with the more complicated adult reality. The sweet and undeniable power of friendship. The search for father figures when real fathers aren’t around. Looking out for one another, always.

Reese Witherspoon is cast as a troubled hottie; she doesn’t get a whole lot to do but she pulls off the different look admirably. Boardwalk Empire fans get both Nelson Van Alden (the always highly watchable Michael Shannon) and Mickey “Heh-heh-heh” Doyle. For American Horror Story: Asylum buffs, there’s Lana Winters as Ellis’s mom, aching for change. Ray McKinnon, getting more press recently as the creator of Rectify on the Sundance Channel, is Ellis’s hard-luck-but-still-trying dad. I haven’t seen Sam Shepard in a long time and yikes, he got kind of old. Sure was a handsome bastard, wasn’t he?

Good work all around by writer/director Jeff Nichols. He makes the Arkansas working-river setting feel very, very real, and he elicits some very strong performances, especially from the two young men. The film unravels a bit toward the end, a little too much going on, some too-neat “if there’s a gun in the first act…” developments (except it isn’t a gun; well, there is a gun also), and things wrapping up a little too cleanly. But overall a nice piece of work and an environment I felt very comfortable in.

Posted in movie reviews | Tagged 10s movies, Mud | 2 Responses

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