Last night I attended the George Michael tour at the TD Banknorth Boston Garden. The tour only has a few more dates left in the U.S., but the show did not appear tired or slow – in fact, I think George Michael was enjoying himself nearly as much as the crowd.

Despite a late start, George Michael proved to be worth the wait. The show lasted a bit over 2 hours and he proved himself quite capable of entertaining a stadium sized audience. To be sure there were several songs missing from his line-up that I would have loved to hear, but he compensated by including some surprise choices like a slow, jazzy cover of Roxanne.

I’ve included a link to the glowing Boston Globe review and below is the cover version of Roxanne from his show earlier this week in New York.

Almost perfect and absolutely beautiful

These are two of the most beautiful dancers I’ve watched this season on my guilty pleasure television program, SYTYCD. I still can not believe Will is not going to be in the finals.

If Wall Street is suffering a hangover, why am I the one with the headache?

President Bush is taking a lot of heat for blaming the current housing crisis and the subsequent economic downturn (a.k.a. – recession) on Wall Street. Specifically, he said that Wall Street ‘got drunk’ and was now suffering a ‘hangover’.

People are angry that he blamed Wall Street for the current economic crisis, but I think there is a ring of truth to his assessment. The part of his statement that frustrates me is, first – is he only able to recognize this binge in hindsight? and second – where was the government?

Bush made it clear that he abhorred government regulation and spent the past 8 years looking the other way while big business was told they could do whatever they wanted so why is he so surprised by this binge drinking? If Wall Street got drunk, there is no doubt in my mind that George Bush and the Republican led Congress were tending bar. Apparently there is no more open bar and people like you and me have been stiffed with the tab.

As You Like It

You know it is summer in Boston when all the free concerts, movies and of course Shakespeare in the park (or Commons to be more precise) are in full swing. Starting last weekend, William Shakespeare’s play, “As You Like It” opened. Unfortunately, the weather was both ridiculously hot and humid so I opted to stay home, but I hope to see the play which is set up near the bandstand on the Boston Commons later this week. The play is free to the public and will run through Sunday, August 3rd so take advantage of the nice weather, grab a bottle (or two of your favorite wine and head down to see the show).

For more information about the show times you can link to the Citi Performing Arts Center website (a.k.a. The Wang) here.

About As You Like It
This Shakespearean comedy features one of William Shakespeare’s most famous lines “all the world’s a stage” and was made into a movie by English actor, Kenneth Branagh in 2006. To read more about this comedy link here.

New England Sand Sculpture Festival at Revere Beach

This morning I went to Revere Beach for the first time. Certainly, Revere Beach will never win any awards for natural beauty, but I was surprised by how clean and large the beach was. The reason for the visit was to see the New England Sand Sculpture Festival. Awards had been given yesterday and the sand sculptures were on display for all to see.

I’ve included some pictures of some of the sand sculptures. The enormous sculptures seemed to inspire many and smaller, more modest attempts were underway as we walked along the beach.

We all say things we regret but jeesh…

We all say things we regret, and granted John McCain said this a long time ago, but really as a politician don’t you think you would credit him with more common sense? This is the man who Hillary Clinton supporters are suppose to turn their backs on Obama in protest and vote for? I think not…

In case you had not heard this now infamous joke told by John McCain in front of the National League of Cities and Towns in Washington D.C. it goes something like this…

John McCain asked the crowd if they had heard “the one about the woman who was attacked on the street by a gorilla, beaten senseless, raped repeatedly and left to die?”

The punch line: “When she finally regains consciousness and tries to speak, her doctor leans over to hear her sigh contently and to feebly ask, “Where is that marvelous ape?”

Ick… not funny. I wonder what his campaign would have said if this was attributed to Obama.

1-800-OHH-CRAP

For the first time in my life I lost my cell phone. I blame it on two factors, baggy shorts with pockets that constantly make me lose change whenever and wherever I sit down and two bloody mary’s that dulled my senses (but tasted so good).

I believe that the phone slipped out of my pocket between the seats of a cab I was taking. Although I did love the phone, the only thing I really miss about it is the long list of phone numbers that I had programmed into it. Until I lost it, I had no idea how much I relied on it to act as my phone book. With the exception of my home phone, and a handful of other numbers I recall mostly from my childhood, I’m at a loss. If there is a purpose to this entry it is to provide fair warning to any who read this to either a) pay the extra money for your provider to have this list stored someplace or b) sync your phone entries to your home computer so you can access them in case you lose your phone.

This weekend my partner asked me when I was going to get a new phone and it made me realize how little I had missed having it last week. When I changed my job this past winter, it was apparent that I would need to ‘trade-up’ and get a PDA, but I was reluctant mostly because I loved my little red razor. However, I have taken this recent loss as a sign of divine intervention and plan to purchase a PDA within the week. For now, I’m enjoying my new-found freedom of life ‘sans mobile’.

Dog days of summer

It is definitely one of those days. The weather has been hot in Boston, and the combination of houseguests for the past three weeks and hot & humid weather has resulted in me feeling just like these puppies. All I want to do is crawl back into my bed (with my AC on full-blast of course).

Mercedes will no longer make cars to run on petroleum by 2015

Now I’ve never been a car-geek. Heck, I have not driven to work for more than 10 years so I know I’m out of the loop when it comes to news in the auto industry, but I thought Mercedes recent announcement to stop making automobiles that run on petroleum by the year 2015 was pretty earth-shattering. God knows five years ago nobody I knew would believe such a statement.

Now if only the American automakers can stop licking their wounds and try to lead through innovation to make the next generation of transportation that is not reliant on fossil fuels we might have something to cheer about. The greenie in me was thrilled to read the news on Modern Fabulosity’s blog today. Let’s hope others follow Mercedes lead.

Closeted Governor Ties the Knot to be No. 2

Okay so that is not exactly the title the Florida press chose to print, but it might as well have been. Full-time bachelor and current Florida Governor Crist tied the knot last week in what seems like a desperate attempt to thwart those nasty rumors about him being a closeted homo.

News of the surprise wedding solidifies my belief that a deal was struck following McCain’s rebuke in the SC primary for Crist to be McCain’s Vice President if in return he would endorse and campaign for him in the FL primary. It’s doubtful that a conservative voting block would be comfortable electing a bachelor (doesn’t fit with the the party of family values) and blogs have been predicting that Crist would have to marry to make himself a more desireable V.P.

In politics people say and do strange things and this certainly will not be the first marriage of convenience, but after a lifetime of bachelorhood – Crist’s surprise marriage after dating for less than 9-mos seems mostly sad to me (gay or not).

Brake for a visit

I received a call from a cousin who I rarely get a chance to see mostly because of schedules and geography. However on a whim he called because he will be in Boston for a few days. Unfortunately, I’ll be in NYC all day tomorrow so I will only be able to see him for breakfast on Thursday before he heads out of town.

His call gave me pause to consider how many people I know are lucky enough to have such close connections with so many family members. This cousin who I refer to has never been someone I saw regularly, but we both share a family bond that we mutually respect and no matter how much time passes or how infrequent our meetings, I always am excited to see him or one of his siblings.

I wish I could add something more philosophical or capture some elusive thought that would make this entry in my blog stand out. But the simple fact is knowing I will see him on Thursday has really made my day, and I’m so happy he came up to Boston. I’ll tuck this memory away along with other random moments we have shared and think about this moment at some point in our shared future no doubt.

What would you say if an Obama aide said their campaign would benefit from American deaths?

Presumably, there would be outrage in the media, blogs and elsewhere, but when John McCain’s long-time friend and chief strategist said to Fortune Magazine that the assassination of Benazir Bhutto “saved” the McCain campaign in the NH primary and a terrorist attack on the U.S. would be to their advantage – there was hardly a peep. Funny how McCain supporters have not been outraged by one of our own theorizing how American deaths might serve the ‘greater good’ – presuming that electing McCain is the greater good.

Obama has at times been the teflon-candidate (nothing bad seems to stick), but nobody complains about the constant attacks from conservative talk radio, YouTube videos, news broadcast channels like FOX News (where Carl Rove now calls home) or the overly politicized pulpits of the tens of thousands of fundamentalist churches who have used race as a wedge and continue to berate Obama (and his wife) every chance they get. If a senior aide from the Obama campaign inferred that massive casualties in Iraq would ‘be to their advantage’ people would be rightfully outraged. One does not wish pain and suffering or openly court it in the press, but McCain seems to be surrounded by individuals who seem to find it perfectly acceptable; provided they are the ones doing the talking.

This most recent gaff is all the more interesting because it comes on the heels of last month’s fiasco involving the notorious Texan millionaire, Clayton Williams. Clayton has made jokes about rape telling women “as long as it’s inevitable, you might as well lie back and enjoy it.” McCain did cancel his appearance at the last minute but has kept the $300,000. Can you imagine the outrage and how racist phobias would be ignited if Obama took money from a friend who made a similar comment?

Is there a double-standard for Obama and McCain? Absolutely, but apparently it cuts both ways and depending on your personal sympathies these are either non-issues or outrages that infuriate. Take your pick.

Funniest Graduation Speech – Ever

Since my last post was a bit more intense than I expected and I like to think of myself as both a person of deeply held convictions as well as a person who enjoys a good laugh – I thought I would balance out my last post with this video of Lance Jabr speaking at his high school graduation.

Yale clearly made a mistake overlooking this student.

I initially saw this post on CityRag, but you can watch this video on the College Humor website by linking here.

Give me your tired, your poor…

The Boston Globe is reporting that the Armenian Heritage Foundation has “cleared a major hurdle” in its effort to have a memorial on the Rose Kennedy Greenway to commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide which occurred just after the first World War and resulted in the death of 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Turks.

When the memorial was originally proposed by the Armenian Heritage Foundation, there was nearly universal push-back out of concern that every block on the greenway would result in a different memorial. However, the proposed memorial will also commemorate Boston as a city with a proud history of offering “hope and refuge for immigrants seeking to begin new lives”.

After reading the article in today’s Boston Globe, I’m interested to see the monument in person. Apparently the 12-sided geometrical sculpture is expected to open in the summer of 2009 and is being constructed in such a way that it will be able to be reconfigured each year to symbolize how immigrant communities continue to reshape our city and country.

I like the dual role of the memorial as both a tribute to immigrants and a somber reminder to those killed in a horrible genocide. The American public is very xenophobic at the moment and the debate about illegal immigration has shown an ugly and often racist streak that is not willing to acknowledge the reality of the situation or identify a realistic solution to the problem. This proposed monument embodies what I think we as Americans meant when we installed the plaque on the Statue of Liberty which says:

Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me:
I lift my lamp beside the golden door.
I think that when a country allows itself to be ruled by fear, the results can be dangerous. I would not suggest that the United States would allow a genocide to result because of our current problems with immigrants and really all things pertaining to foreigners, but such horrible moments in human history can only come about when there is a deep distrust of “others”. History is riddled with these lessons and we can look to the Nazi’s in Germany looking to keep a ‘pure’ race (whatever that means), the horrible tragedies in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, or more recently the tragedies that continue in the Darfur region of the Sudan.

I know how great my country can be when we are at our best. I feel like Franklin Deleanor Roosevelt’s quote “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself” rings very true in the United States today. Although FDR was addressing the problems Americans were facing with the Great Depression, I think that the American public has been terrorized through half-truths and uncorroborated threats from the Bush administration into distrusting the rest of the world. So it is with anticipation that I wait for the new Armenian Genocide Memorial, because even if our society is not living up to our ideals, this memorial much like the Statue of Liberty will be tangible evidence of ideals Americans have upheld in the past and will hopefully strive to attain in our near future.

Milken Institute Ranks MA Simply the Best

Recently, Massachusetts was identified as the the top technology incubator for the third time by the Milken Institute. The Milken Institute, a CA-based think tank, identifies states that are fostering innovation and, theoretically, will reap the rewards from making those investments.

Another recent report from PricewaterhouseCoopers, which came out last week addressed Massachuesetts global dominance in biotechnology and the life sciences industry, but cautioned that the state needed to continue to innovate and work with local businesses to fend off competition from other states and other parts of the world.

There are many reports that come out each year – often with conflicting results, but a constant is MA always at or near the top when it comes to ranking a state’s commitment or focus on technology.