Sunday Stealing 200.02

One score and seventeen

This week’s Sunday Stealing is part of the 200 questions that Bev used last week. Here are 15 more from the same source, so I dubbed it 200.02. Next week, it will likely be 200.03.

1. What takes up too much of your time?

Getting rid of email. However, I tend to rid myself of the “promotional” items on Gmail 100 at a time, and that’s satisfying.

2. What do you wish you knew more about?

How Artificial Intelligence works. 

3. What’s the best way to start the day?

I tend to put on some music—I’m currently listening to 18 Tracks by Bruce Springsteen. Unless I have difficulty posting, I post my blog on Facebook. I check my primary email and phone messages to ensure nothing catastrophic happened overnight. Then, I tend to start a blog post while my wife takes a shower. I’ll go downstairs, make oatmeal for two, empty the dishwasher, feed the cat, and feed the humans.

4. What mystery do you wish you knew the answer to?

How has a certain presidential candidate been embraced as being called by God to run? 

5. What’s your favorite genre of book or movie?

Books tend to be non-fiction. I watch a lot of movies but I tend to avoid gore.

6. What’s the farthest you’ve ever been from home?

3536 miles (5691 km) – that would be Paris, France, not to be confused with Paris, Texas.

7. Where is the most interesting place you’ve been?

That might be Las Vegas, a place I absolutely would NEVER want to live. When I went there, I felt like a sociologist.

8. When was the last time you climbed a tree for fun?

I was always notoriously bad at climbing trees.

Music-related, of course

9. What do you consider to be your best find?

A series of books from Record Research by the late Joel Whitburn about the music charts: I refer to them nearly every month.

10. What’s special about the place where you grew up?

I went to one school from kindergarten through ninth grade. Nine of us went all the way through together; eight of us graduated from high school together. I’m still in touch with three of them. In fact, I had lunch with the three near Albany on April 6, 2021, after we had all gotten our two COVID-19 shots.  

11. What age do you wish you could permanently be?

37, old enough to know stuff, young enough to want to learn more still. 

12. What fictional place would you most like to go?

Emerald City. I’ve never seen a dancing, singing scarecrow. 

13. Where is the most relaxing place you’ve ever been?

No doubt, Barbados, 1999. Seven nights, six days, eating at one of three places. The weather was lovely. 

14. What’s the most interesting piece of art you’ve seen?

I have written about it but haven’t posted about it yet. I will in good time. It was in Washington, DC.

15. Who has impressed you the most with what they have accomplished?

I played against Amy Roeder on JEOPARDY in 1998. She’s now a Maine state legislator with an impressive record. 

Too many Hot Soul #1 singles for 1974

James Brown

As is true of the other charts that year, there were too many Hot Soul #1 singles for 1974. Some 30 tracks topped the charts. Once again, the lazy blogger will list only the ones that reached the pinnacle for more than one week.

Because I posted them earlier this month, I’m excluding Feel Like Makin’ Love by Roberta Flack (five weeks RB); Can’t Get Enough Of Your Love, Babe by Barry White (three weeks RB);  Rock Your Baby by George McCrae (two weeks RB); and You Haven’t Done Nothin by  Stevie Wonder, featuring the Jackson Five (two weeks RB)

Boogie Down – Eddie Kendricks, 3 weeks at #1 RB, 2 weeks at #2 pop. Of course, I saw him in the early 1980s as part of the Temptations reunion tour. He stayed with Motown.

Lookin’ For A Love – Bobby Womack,  3 weeks at #1 RB, #10 pop. I know this song, by the Valentinos, J. Geils, and others, but not this version. 

#1 RB for two weeks

Mighty Love, Part 1 – The Spinners, #20 pop. The group had to leave Motown for Atlantic to achieve their greatest success.

Best Thing That Ever Happened To Me – Gladys Knight and the Pips, #3 pop. The group had to leave Motown for Buddah to achieve greater success.

The Payback, Pt. 1 – James Brown, #26 pop. When I read JET magazine in the 1960s, JB dominated their music charts, often with songs I never heard on my Top 40 radio station. Here’s another example.

I’m In Love – Aretha Franklin, #19 pop

Finally Got Myself Together (I’m A Changed Man) – The Impressions, #17 pop

My Thang – James Brown, #29 pop

Let’s Straighten It Out – Latimore, #31 pop

Woman To Woman – Shirley Brown, #22 pop. I have this on a STAX compilation.

I Feel A Song (In My Heart) – Gladys Knight and the Pips, #21 pop

Boogie On Reggae Woman – Stevie Wonder, #3 for two weeks pop. He stayed with Motown and became one of the biggest artists of the 1970s. Damn, I love those early 1970s albums including Fulfillingness’ First Finale.

CHQ: Boyz II Men

Motownphilly

Our daughter didn’t go with us to Chautauqua Institution, but if she had, she would have attended the Boyz II Men concert. She’s really into 1990s soul, and the group broke into the charts early in that decade.

CHQ has had other popular music acts this season, such as Martina McBride and the Beach Boys. Still, I wondered if Chautauquans knew of these singers. While some were familiar, others were not so much. “But they were huge!” I noted.

From Wikipedia: “The group first saw commercial success in 1991 with the release of their singles ‘Motownphilly’ and “It’s So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday,” both of which peaked within the top five of the Billboard Hot 100. Their 1992 single, ‘End of the Road’ peaked atop the chart and set a then-record for spending 13 weeks at the position. Boyz II Men later broke this record twice more with the singles ‘I’ll Make Love to You’ and ‘One Sweet Day’ (with Mariah Carey), which, at 14 and 16 weeks, respectively, set records for most weeks at number one. When ‘On Bended Knee’ took the number one spot away from ‘I’ll Make Love to You,’ Boyz II Men became the third musical act, after the Beatles and Elvis Presley, to replace themselves atop the Billboard Hot 100.”

Formed in 1985, they were a quartet: baritone Nathan Morris, tenors Wanyá Morris (no relation) and Shawn Stockman, and bass singer Michael McCary. McCary left the group in 2003 for what turned out to be multiple sclerosis. Since then, the group has persevered as a trio.
Songs
Here are some of the songs they performed:
Don’t Stop Till You Get Enough (Michael Jackson song)
Water Runs Dry
One More Try
On Bended Knee
More Than You’ll Ever Know
Cooley High Harmony
Uhh ahh
4 Seasons of Loneliness
A Change Is Gonna Come (Sam Cooke song)

At this point, nothing shocked me. But then they got much louder than I would have expected and did it well, including Are You Going My Way (Lenny Kravitz song), American Woman (Lenny Kravitz version of a Guess Who song), and Come Together (Beatles song).

Say Goodbye To Yesterday
One Sweet Day – the audience was asked to provide the Mariah Carey part
I’ll Make Love To You
End Of The Road
Motownphilly—of course, Motownphilly. How else could one end the show but with the song that namechecks them? Here are some more videos.

There was no encore. I suspect that was a CHQ requirement since the workers had to refigure the stage for the next morning’s activities. The one song I wanted to hear they didn’t perform, Thank You, blasted from the speakers as the audience departed.
CHQ pricing
I should explain the pricing at the Chautauqua institution. There is a parking fee. Room and board varied depending on the location and how early one books. An access pass allowed you to see most of the shows for free.

People not staying at Chautauqua did, in fact, see some of the programs and got preferential seating. But they paid $69-$129. The CSO concerts of Phil Collins’ music, Dvorak 8, and the Chautauqua Opera Co.’s “Hansel and Gretel” all started at $49 each.

James Earl Jones (1931-2024)

2 Tony awards

The first time I specifically remember seeing James Earl Jones in a movie was in The Great White Hope (1970), where he played a Jack Johnson-like boxer. I went to the cinema with my high school girlfriend and her father. Both Jones and Jane Alexander had won Tonys for their Broadway performances. The performances were very good, though I thought the film was too stagy.
More likely, I watched him on television series in the 1960s, such as the great East Side/West Side (1962) or the courtroom drama The Defenders, in which he played two different characters. I have the Along Came a Spider episode in season 1 on DVD! I’ll have to check that out. 
It’s possible I saw him on the soap operas Guiding Light and/or As The World Turns, which my maternal grandmother and great-aunt watched religiously.  

I was recently making a list of my favorite movies. Field Of Dreams is definitely on it, and James Earl Jones’ near-monologue is a primary reason.

The VOICE

But it’s the voice, in everything from Star Wars (1977 et al.)to The Lion King (1994) to the CNN tag – all represented in this brief Simpsons clip – that he was best known for. Listen also to his narration of Edgar Allan Poe’s The Raven. Per Mark Evanier, he even did an episode of Garfield.

It’s strange for someone who stuttered so severely as a child, born on January 17, 1931, in Arkabutla, MS,  that he stopped speaking for a time because of his abusive grandmother’s treatment. “Mr. Jones profited from a deep analysis of meaning in his lines. ‘Because of my muteness,’ he said in ‘Voices and Silences,’ a 1993 memoir written with Penelope Niven, ‘I approached language in a different way from most actors. I came at language standing on my head, turning words inside out in search of meaning, making a mess of it sometimes, but seeing truth from a very different viewpoint.'”

I also saw him in the movies, including The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings (1976), Coming to America (1988), The Hunt for Red October (1990), Sneakers (1992), The Sandlot (1993), and more recently, Dr. Strangelove or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964).

Indeed, I watched him in anything that aired on TV, including Homicide: Life on the Street, Picket Fences, Law & Order, and NYPD Blue, and his portrayal of Alex Haley on Roots: The Next Generation.

The Brooks and Marsh book on TV described his role as a police captain on Paris (1979), a short-lived program, as lacking “believability… Jones, a highly respected actor, strutted through this role speaking in booming, stentorian tones as if it were Richard III.”  But I watched it; it was James Earl Jones! On this show, he met his second wife, Cecilia Hart, who predeceased him.

“His Acting Resonated Onstage and On-screen”

Alas, I never saw him on stage. “A commanding presence on the Broadway stage, Jones earned four competitive Tony Award nominations for Best Actor in a Play, winning twice for his performances as Jack Jefferson in The Great White Hope in 1969 and Troy Maxson in August Wilson’s Fences in 1987. He received a Special Tony Award at the 2017 ceremony…

“In September 2022, the Shubert Organization rechristened its 110-year-old Cort Theatre as The James Earl Jones Theatre… ‘For me standing in this very building 64 years ago at the start of my Broadway career, it would have been inconceivable that my name would be on the building today,’ Jones said in a statement… “Let my journey from then to now be an inspiration for all aspiring actors.'”

Jones was a 2002 Kennedy Center Honoree and received Lifetime Achievement Awards from SAG-AFTRA in 2009 and the National Board of Review in 1995. Here’s a 1996 interview, a life in pictures, a critic’s appreciation of an “ideal elevator companion,” and the New York Times obituary

Given the fact that he was 93 and had lived what most would consider a “good life,” I was surprised at how utterly sad I was at his passing.

Restoring Confidence in American Elections

Hoover Institute

The Hoover Institute published a paper, Restoring Confidence in American Elections, in June 2024. Distinguished Visiting Fellow Ben Ginsberg and Stanford professor Bruce Cain wrote it. The paper explores “the polarization in American election views. It also analyzes where common ground might be found to bring divided factions together.” 

As an old political science major, I was interested in what they had to say, even though Hoover was considered “conservative.”

“The core division over election reform is often now characterized as ‘fraud versus suppression,’ and the partisan gap on this issue is wider today than in the past. Public faith in the accuracy of US elections is currently at an historic low, with more than 30 percent of the population doubting the accuracy of elections. If unaddressed, this could severely undermine the US political system and its form of government, which is rooted in the peaceful transfer of power… ” Several surveys in recent years, including from the Ad Council (2023), confirm this.

“Evidence from the MIT Election Data and Science Lab backs this up [finds] that voters are mostly unaware of the many complex and specific procedures that election administrators follow.  In some instances, the procedures voters thought would give them more confidence in the election process were already in place.” As a poll worker in 2021, I was impressed by the training beforehand and the intentional redundancy in the counting process. Fraud would be extremely difficult to introduce into the system.

“The current legitimacy crisis over US elections may be more reflective of what voters learned from news coverage, social media, and online sources of information than what they personally experienced.” Or, I would posit, lies told by certain candidates and their surrogates.

Damn federalism!

“The decentralized delegation to the states of many procedural details for state and federal elections means that voters are often surprised to learn that other states have different rules. More than ten thousand jurisdictions are responsible for the casting, counting, and certification of their
communities’ votes.” It IS convoluted.

“The United States’ strong federalist structure may also be a contributing factor to the rise of convenience voting, an increasingly popular but controversial method of balloting. Because the United States has so many elections at all levels of government, voters in many states must
fill out very long and complicated ballots… Understandably, many citizens now prefer the convenience of voting at home and dropping the ballot off at a voting center, rather than navigating the long lines while waiting for other people to work their way through the lengthy list of choices on
Election Day.” 

Certain districts also had longer lines, and while some states allow time off to vote, others do not.

“The growing partisan divide on voting rules is also reflected in the pattern of new voting law proposed by each party in the states… Democrats generally propose laws that provide more opportunities for people to vote with fewer requirements, whereas Republicans prefer laws that provide more checks to make it harder for potentially ineligible individuals to vote. The result is significantly more litigation over election laws, as well as a ramping up of partisan campaign rhetoric over “fraud” or “suppression” in get-out-the-vote messaging, all of which contribute to more partisan polarization in the country as a whole.”

Both sidesism

There’s a degree of “both sides” in the argument, which I disagree with.

I admit I’m suspicious of Texas Republicans who are accused of intimidation. The homes of members of the United States’ oldest Latino civil rights organizations were raided over voter fraud claims.

More problematic in terms of the 2024 presidential election involves Georgia. “In a series of meetings in July and August, the Georgia State Election Board voted 3-2 to change the rules governing local election boards. (The three members voting to change the rules all deny that Joe Biden won Georgia in 2020, despite the complete lack of evidence for that view. Trump has given them a shout-out at a political rally. When was the last time a national candidate paid any attention to a state election board?)” If the vote is as close as it was in 2020, expect chaos.

Most infuriating, How Tennessee Keeps Nearly Half a Million People From Voting. “While nearly all states suspend or withdraw people’s right to vote when they are convicted of felonies, most allow restoring that right after they have served their sentences…  But Tennessee has moved in the opposite direction, making the process significantly more difficult. (Think: bureaucratic maze from hell.) About 9 percent of the state’s voting-age population is prohibited from voting because of felony convictions.”

Solutions

I’m skipping over the Common Myths section of the Hoover argument, which is interesting but not pivotal. The authors list reasonable suggestions, albeit difficult to achieve.

Enact Legislation to Better Secure the Safety of Election Officials
and Poll Workers

Encourage Greater Uniformity in Electoral Practices through Evidence-Based Assessments of Both Participation and Security Impacts. “The issue should be viewed on two levels. One is differences between the states, which are perhaps inevitable given our history not only in matters involving elections but also in many other matters of governance. More solvable is the lack of uniformity among jurisdictions within a single state, which also causes confusion and, therefore, an erosion of confidence in elections.” Yes. “Uniformity in the administration of a state’s laws and standardization of electoral systems within a state’s jurisdictions could lead to a vast increase in public confidence in elections.”

Outreach to the Public on Voting Administration Should Be Targeted, Tested, and Coordinated

Reliable

Develop Bipartisan “Standards of Reliability” to Reassure the Public of the
Accuracy of Elections. This has several components.  Absentee ballot / mail-in ballot validation measures. Prompt reporting of election results. Easily available mail/early voting (no excuse). National voter ID (including one-time initial proof of citizenship for all current voters, available at no cost). Online voter registration. Notice and cure of defective ballots. Drop boxes monitored with video. Voter roll maintenance – a BIG problem. Multistate database to check duplicate voter registrations.

Also: Absentee ballot applications to all voters but not live ballots. No ballot harvesting – I TOTALLY agree with this. Paper trail for all ballots. Postelection risk-limiting audits. Observers allowed in polling places and where votes are tabulated – “Observers should be required to attend a training session to familiarize themselves with the jurisdiction’s processes so they can better understand what they observe.” Adequate funding for elections. Protection for election officials. 

Finally

Here’s the conclusion: “Some might conclude that these examples of plausible initial steps of bipartisan election administration are too small and that reform efforts should go big or go home. That would be fine if the country were not deeply polarized and bipartisan consensus was not so difficult to achieve. Cross-party reforms necessarily involve negotiation and building trust by finding the most obvious points of agreement first. Continuing down a path that undermines public faith in democratic institutions is not an acceptable option. Even if small steps do not address
the underlying problems associated with strong federalism or overly partisan officials, they would be a valuable start toward changing the negative direction of contemporary American citizen culture.”

I think it’s a useful document. Coordinating information among the states seems particularly difficult, but the rationale for it makes sense. But what do you think we can/should do to Restore Confidence in American Elections?

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