1 posted on
09/15/2003 8:44:42 AM PDT by
presidio9
To: presidio9
Good article. Better than I expected.
2 posted on
09/15/2003 8:59:29 AM PDT by
Mind-numbed Robot
(Not all things that need to be done need to be done by the government.)
To: presidio9
Nice sentiments, but this writer stinks. Here, just because it's a school day, are some of the worst phrases:
"longstanding bout"
"swinging ladder from above"
"drug-related addictions" and "health-related maladies"
"illustrative life"
"charismatic magnetism that has spanned five decades of popular culture"
"songwriting orbited around"
"gospel songs etched deeply in his DNA"
I could go on ... I'd give my 12-year-old a C+ if she produced this piece, and require a full rewrite eliminating every single adjective, just as a start.
3 posted on
09/15/2003 9:01:41 AM PDT by
Tax-chick
(RIP Johnny Cash ... "Take this weight from me, let my spirit be unchained.")
To: presidio9
The best tribute I've read appears where else but in a conservative publication!
4 posted on
09/15/2003 9:04:14 AM PDT by
Revolting cat!
(Boss, I forgot to bring my tag line!)
To: presidio9
6 posted on
09/15/2003 9:11:29 AM PDT by
knarf
(A place where anyone can learn anything ... especially that which promotes clear thinking.)
To: presidio9
You should see the keening and wailing in the Nashville news media. Beginning Friday and continuing pretty much non-stop, the local TV's have made it almost impossible to get ANY news by their non-stop parading of just about anyone Cash ever knew or worked with thru the newscasts. They softened it up a bit Sunday, but it'll be good for about 15 minutes again tonight since today's the funeral. It's not that there's much real news in his passing - he's been dead-man-walking for the last 2 years - but the need to have pandered to that segment of the public for which Country Music is all they care about. They are afraid of losing the PR battle to their competitors, so they play Cash Chicken on their newscasts. The way this works is, they line up enough Cash fluff pieces to fill the whole newscast. And, monitoring the other stations, they run them until their rivals bail and move on to another topic. Only then do they move on to other news.
They also play Weather Chicken, too. When severe weather hits, they monitor each other while going wall-to-wall radar. The local NBC here will NOT go back to regular programming until the ABC and CBS already have. It doesn't matter how many times they have to repeat themselves, if ABC or CBS are still in radar, they'll stick it out until both of the others have left it.
Back to Cash - the newsies will cover the funeral today, then tomorrow they'll cover "yesterday's funeral." Then, there is going to be a Keening And Wailing Public Memorial, so they'll devote a big part of three or four days to cover that. If someone of note in music dies around Nashville, you can count on a good 8 or 9 days of solid Mourning News. It's obligatory in the South. They stop JUST SHORT of draping the TV studio sets in black.
Michael
To: presidio9
"Locust and honey...not since John the Baptist has there been a voice like that crying in the wilderness," is how U2's Bono described him. "The most male voice in Christendom. Every man knows he is a sissy compared to Johnny Cash."
To: presidio9
Just saw this on NRO. Thanks for posting.
A similar article is Man in White from a recent issue of WORLD magazine.
17 posted on
10/26/2003 5:23:15 AM PST by
rhema
To: presidio9; Tax-chick; Mind-numbed Robot; livius; oldfart
Dave Shiflett's "The Unlikely Superstar: Johnny Cash, up to Glory" may be a better-written tribute, I think. Unfortunately, it's inaccessible online; you'd have to get the October 13 print edition of
National Review to read it.
And check out Gene Edward Veith's "Man in White," linked in post 17.
18 posted on
10/26/2003 5:41:32 AM PST by
rhema
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