Month: September 2012

  • a a a creek 1 an occurrence at owl creek bridge

    a a a creek 2 shadowsa a a creek 3 creepy wife The Daily News

    1  I dont even remember what I wrote in yesterday’s DN, but it somehow got a million/kajillion hits.

    2  I have this little hit meter that pops up every now and again, and for whatever reason, a ton of people tuned in on yesterday’s piece.

    3  To me, these are all a blur.

    4   I’ve been too busy lately to read whatever the guy who writes this drivel writes. I have been on a rampage to grade a bazillion papers, so everything else right now is like snow in my eyes.

    5   I am also racing downhill to meet a grading deadline of Tuesday at 4 p.m. I know I’m going to hit that deadline, but I have a computer that tends to be iffy when starting up, and which jumps letters to different lines of sentences on a minute-by-minute basis.

    6   I eat salads and crusty french bread for dinner and conk at nine or nine-thirty each night, sometimes leaving dishes and napkins out.

    7   But I’m cool wid it. Cool wid it. What have we become? No matter.

    8   Every time the computer decides to buffer or act stupid, which it does constantly, I read another student’s paper. I am obsessed at hitting this deadline, even on Friday.

    9   Payday.

    10  Wait.

    11  I get paid to do this?

    12  Moving on, Part One: We had a last-minute fire drill the other day.The admin may have warned us earlier in the year; I don’t know.

    13  I do know that we were told online at around four in the afternoon on Tuesday that it was going to take place the next day. Wednesday was a half-day so that the afternoon could be spent at a meeting, which as stated earlier this week, usually prompts me to want to jump off the Golden Gate Bridge.

    14   What a fire drill means to a teacher racing to hit a deadline is that one of five classes on a minimum day schedule doesn’t have to do anything, while four others do.

    15   When racing to a grading deadline, a teacher does not want his or her classes out of synch. We want all our classes doing essentially the same thing all periods so that we wake up and have one thing to think about, instead of two or three.

    16  I have what they call two “preps,” meaning that I teach English 1A and 2A, two different classes, with different literature, vocab, et cetera, et cetera, but it is fairly easy to teach the same things with different lit and vocab. For example, I could teach a vocabulary lesson with two different lists, but do a lot of the same activities, making my planning reasonably simple and lined up.

    17  But if one class sits out on a fire drill for thirty minutes, that class falls behind my other classes, and it reeks havoc on my schedule of each day.

    18  If another class gets way ahead, and a third class gets stuck in the mud, I go in and have to plan three different lessons, which is akin to an airplane going out of control.

    19   Fortunately, I have an array of backup lessons in the event something is suddenly sprung on us.

    20   I don’t know that the fire drill was sprung on us. For all I know it may have been annouced on the first day of school.

    21   On the first day of school, I make it a point to write everything that could possibly t-bone me in a planner. I am meticulous with dates, probably a hangover from my days of running the school’s activities.

    22   The trouble with the grading periods per semester is that they force a hectic deadline in which everything in our real lives gets pushed aside while we race to get everything graded and accurately in place for the digital yearbook window, which closes like death this Tuesday at four.

    23  The last thing we need is a last-minute fire drill.

    24   I thought fast and decided I might let the rest of my students watch all of the extra DVD stuff from the 9/11 DVD. I don’t like going backwards, because it’s sort of bush league to me. But I knew I had that, and the TV was still hooked up from when we watched it on 9/11.

    25    I may have told you, may have not, but I teach seasonally, using American advertising as my own commercials for what it is I teach.

    26   So on 9/11 I taught about 9/11, on Back-to-School Night I had students make magazines when school supplies were being shoved down everyone’s throat at the end of summer. To a farmer, this last week was the end of summer. To Madison Avenue, the end of summer is the beginning of school. And Mad Ave controls the present.

    27   Just watch the shelves in Walgreens; you’ll know exactly when the advertising seasons change. Never mind the weather, or the charts, or the Farmer’s Almanac. It is the end of summer when the gardening/summer stuff is pulled off the shelves and the binders, planners, and new clothes fly into the stores. That’s when I assign my magazine assignment for Back-to-School night. 

    28   I ride that wave each year. The next big thing coming up is clearly Halloween, so I will be going into the Heidi Chronicles really soon, perhaps next week, so that we will be prepared for the classic ghost stories in the theatre by Halloween.

    29  I always thought that teaching seasonally was brilliant. I teach what the advertising industry is selling. I have billions of dollars advertising my lessons for free.

    30  That’s the entreprenuer in me.

    31   Anyway, the thought of playing 9/11 dampens the impact because that was a few weeks ago, and should have been put to bed. I wanted something else, but nothing seemed available.

    32  The fire drill pulled me out of my rhythm at a time when I had no time whatsoever to pull off a miracle.

    33  I got to school on Wednesday, searched for my 9/11 DVD and it was gone.

    34  I figured I had probably left it home, which it turned out I had.

    35   Frantically I looked around for a DVD that might last around a half hour. I looked at some Twilight Zones, but they are sitting peacefully on a shelf, quietly waiting for the Heidi unit. It’s too early for that, even though the Halloween stuff is already in Walgreens. 

    36   I know that the advertising industry puts that stuff out around a month early so that when it hits, it has been in people’s faces for a month. It’s going to sell more merch, because the propaganda is planted early.

    37   Anyway, I needed a miracle on Wednesday morning.

    38   I dug through my DVD’s and a miracle arrived.

    39   I found a DVD of a classic gem called An Occurence at Owl Creek Bridge.

    40   It is in the English 2 book, but the short film is a classic based on the story by San Francisco writer Ambrose Bierce.

    41    You might remember it. It is the story of a Civil War confederate soldier who is hoodwinked by a union soldier into revealing a plot to blow up a bridge, killing the union soldiers working on it. He is condemned to hang from the bridge.

    42     Like everybody else, I see Wikipedia as a lousy source for some things, but I Wikied the story and it is pretty accurate. Here is the Wiki account of the story. I cut the ending because I don’t want to be a spoiler, but you should read it, and then purchase a DVD on Amazon, or wherever you get your flicks.

    43    Here is the awesome story of An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge:

    Set during the American Civil War, “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” is the story of Peyton Farquhar, a Confederate sympathizer condemned to death by hanging from Owl Creek Bridge. At the beginning of the story, the protagonist stands bound at the bridge’s edge. It is later revealed that after a disguised Union scout enlisted him to attempt to demolish the bridge, he was caught in the act.

    In the first part of the story, a gentlemanly planter in his mid-30s is standing on a railroad bridge in Alabama. Six military men and a company of infantry men are present. The man is to be hanged. As he is waiting, he thinks of his wife and children. Then he is distracted by a tremendous noise. He can not identify this noise, other than that it sounds like the clanging of a blacksmith’s hammer on the anvil. He cannot tell if it was far away or nearby. He finds himself apprehensively awaiting each strike, which seem to grow further and further apart. It is revealed that this noise is the ticking of his watch. Then, an escape plan flashes through his mind: “throw off the noose and spring into the stream. By diving I could evade the bullets and, swimming vigorously, take to the woods and get away The story flashes back in time: Peyton Farquhar lives in the South and is a major Confederate supporter. He goes out of his way to perform services to support and help the Confederate side. One day, a gray-clad soldier appears at his When he is hanged, the rope breaks. Farquhar falls into the water. While underwater, he seems to take little 44  That was a cut/paste.It will probably shrink the fonts. Usually does.

    45   The students lapped it up. Yesterday we had discussions and the classes absolutely loved it. I was even able to sneak the film to the class that went out on the fire drill so that all the classes got in synch once more. 

    46  Call it dumb luck, but I suddenly had one of the best early-in-the year lessons ever! I haven’t done much literature yet, and students traditionally sit really quietly early in the year when literature is thrown at them. 

    47  I will usually do a piece of literature and have a conversation with three kids per class, especially if it is late August when school begins.

    48  I worked marginally with Occurence a few years ago, but never had this sort of success. 

    49  What this means is that our literature discussions should be lively for the rest of the year, because they enjoyed thinking, discussing, arguing, and all the stuff any teacher would want. It set the tone for future discussions. It was certainly worth the twenty-five minute investment. 

    50  We have good days.

    51  Having a good Thursday is always a blast.

    52  Well, just thought I’d share a little more of a glimpse of what it is like to be a teacher in hard times. 

    52  Thanks for listening.

    53    Life is good, at least for the moment. Try to find An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge online. It’s awesome. 

    54  Gottago.

    55  Peace.

    ~H~

    www.xanga.com/bharrington









     

     

  • a a a katharine 2

     a a a katharine 1

    a a a la ronde 1 The Daily a a a bus 11 laurel and hardyNews

    1   Student: Why did I get a zero on my test?

    2   Me: Let me find your test and take a look.

    3   Student (pause): You wrote on it, “Don’t cheat.”

    4   Me (remembering seeing the kid’s head giraffing over another student’s test, and noticing the other student trying desperately to hide the answers): Oh, yes. You were definitely caught cheating. I don’t write that unless I see it myelf.

    5   Student: He had his test out where I could look at it. It was his fault.

    a a a huh 1

    6   Me: Don’t blame someone else because you cheated.  

    7   Student: Okay.

     

    a a a kool pops 6 john wayne

    8   True story. I kid you not.

    9    Happened yesterday.

    10  I know I have said this before, but it bears repeating. I always have this fantasy of a student coming up and asking, “Why did you give me an F?”

    11   Followed by my reply: “Because I couldn’t give you a G”

     12   Moving on, Part One: That stuff happens. It’s in the 4 a.m. and I have just come upon the second student of three from that same period whom I caught cheating. He has an expository essay going on right now that sounds as though it was written by a British nobleman. 

    13   In a minute I will test it for plagiarism, which would make this the third student I have caught for that ungodly act. 

    14  Most of you are probably aware that plagiarism is a high crime in academic circles. 

    15  It seems a bit rampant, although it seems eerily absent from a lot of the papers I have tested this year. 

    16  Plagiarism is the steroids of academia. 

    17  Allow me to leave for a few seconds. 

    18  Okay, I took about five minutes with this dude and came up empty. It’s clear he plagiarized but I have no proof.

    19   A teacher looking for plagiarism is sort of like a fisherman fishing for fish. We drop the line in the water with a silent plip, and we wait. We look around to see if anything is there, and we are eerily disappointed when we don’t get a catch.

    20  That sounds wrong, but when a kid hands in one paper which is all over the place, and then comes in with a paper of professorial merit, he becomes a tad suspect. 

    21  The kid won this round.

    22   But I will stare him down. 

    23   As teachers, we aren’t trying to bust students, but we do hope to find a few and straighten them out before they get caught doing the same thing in college, where plagiarism leads many to an educational guillotine. 

    24  And so it goes.

    25  Moving on, Part the Second: It seems too early in the season to be experiencing pains and injuries on the job. People don’t realize it, but teaching has its aches and pains just like any job. 

    26  When I give large essays, I have to stay sedentary in order to get them graded. Yesterday I laughingly complained of a morning buttache from sitting on a wooden chair for hours on end. 

    27  For hours on end. 

    28   Open you both eyes; you’re still not awake.

    29  <aiming threatening pointer at reader> Now pay attention. 

    30   I also have had a chipped tooth from trying to remove a staple with my teeth.

    31


    32   I KNOW, I KNOW.

    33   This time of year, when I give the largest assignments, I also experience a number of other occupational hazards.

    34  They include but are not limited to the following:

    35   Left-Bun Syndrome: Because I’m a righty, I tend to slide to the right while tacking away on the computer. This puts a lot of pressure on my left side, causing pain in my left buttcheek. 

    36  The Blurries: This also come from spending too much time on the computer entering grades, checking emails, researching, and looking for plagiarism. The words move in and out and come forward and then retreat, like there is some goofy hypnotist behind the screen, and he is messing with me. 

    37  Circulation Sensation: All the blood sits around and causes swollen ankles and poor cirulation. When I get up to get a glass of water, I almost go over. That could also just be because I’m a geezer.

    38  Carpal in the Extreme: My left arm in particular looks like Popeye’s. I’m thanking of getting a tat of an anchor. Sleeping on it made it feel like it was hanging on a hook.

    39   Takin’ the Red Eye: Awakening in the middle of the night because I worry I might not make deadlines, and THEN I sit down and write a newsletter about it. Self flagellation in the extreme. 

    40   The Every-Wednesday-I-Want-to-Jump-Off-the-Golden-Gate-Bridge Syndrome: This takes place every Wednesday afternoon following any meeting. Could be the greatest meeting ever, but it is still a meeting. Yesterday’s was better than last weeks, but I still went home shell-shocked, depressed, and delirious. 

    41   Quasimodo Syndrome: This happens when I try to carry five reams of paper I haul around with me in hopes of finding a place I could sit and grade them. I get weighed down so far to the ground that one eye closes and I growl at people. I want to run to the top of the bell tower and start clanging the bell, but we don’t have a bell tower, so that’s that. 

    42   You get the idea.

    43   Nothing like other people’s jobs, I realize, but right about now, I have most of those things goin’ on. Grades are due next Tuesday, but I’m still hauling that stuff around, putting comments, and fishing in the river. 

    44  Wish me luck.

    45  Just another glimpse at the wide, wonderful world of teaching. 

    46   Hope you enjoyed the glimpse. 

    47   See you again.

    ~H~


    www.xanga.com/bharrington



    a a a popeye and olive 



     

     

     

     

     

     

     



  •  

    a a a bud's recruit 1 king vidor productiona a a fear and loathing in Las Vegas 2 a a a superman's pal 4 perry white screaming at olsen  a a a random german couple obviously in love 1 a a a superman's pal 3 a day in the life        The Daily News

    1   Looking at the headlines on AOL (I KNOW, I KNOW!) is an instant lesson in the state of today’s journalism.

    2   AOL really likes to put headlines out there that tease.

    3   Awakening at two a.m. and trying to get news updates from them is preposterous.

    4   Here are a few headlines with my slant on them.

    5   Mom’s Idea Cures Cancer. They found a cure for cancer and it’s not all over the news?

    6   GA Woman Mocked at Supermarket. I must admit, I really wanted to chase that story down, but I was getting a buttache from a wooden chair, which is probably more newsworthy.

     

    7   Bud Harrington Gets Buttache While Writing DN.

    a a a teacher 5

    8   Teen Tormented in Heartbreaking Way. Two freshmen kids hid a nerd’s backpack.

    9    Woman Arrested on Maryland Bus. I’ll bet the paparazzi and news hounds were all over that one.

    a a a no 4

    10  Condition That Could Lead to Divorce. Uh…marriage?

    11  <Picture of Jamie Lee Curtis> You Normally See Her Like This. I don’t care if I see her at all. I didn’t bother clicking on the accompanying video, although I wanted to like hell.

    12   I decided to flip over to Yahoo, because their headlines don’t change every four seconds. Here are a few nuggets from their newsroom:

    13   Huge Eighth Grade Student. What are the odds?

    a a a pie 1

    14   Take a Peek Inside Jennifer Lopez’s Home. Why, is there a gorilla on her couch doing a handstand?

    15   Dog the Bounty Hunter Returns to TV. I never knew he was missing.

    16   And so it goes.

    17   As you can see, we have some pretty important things to report.

    18   As inane as it all is, it’s better than any big news. 

    19   I’m always worried when I complain about boring news, because that’s right about when life looks like Easy Street. 

    20   I count the blessings. 

    21   Good way to be.

    22   Moving On, Part the First: I’m beginning not to like Wednesdays.

    23   Last Wednesday I almost went insane. 

    24   Wednesdays are meeting days. 

    25    Um…yeah. 

    26    I don’t understand meetings. 

    27    Nobody wants them, nobody wants to plan them, nobody wants to go to them, yet every single job around calls meetings.

    28    Haven’t we had email for around six hundred years now?

    29    Last Wednesday we had a presentation from a guy who was telling us essentially that we are doomed as a school because we can’t handle a problem that every school in Cali has. 

    30   I won’t go into details, but he was telling us one horrid scenario after another, causing our already overworked staff to want to run screaming like cartoon characters crashing through doors. 

    31   It’s time meetings at all offices and workplaces cease. 

    32   We should eliminate Tuesday as a day of the week. 

    33   Bleh.

    34   Moving on, Part Two: I know it is TMI but I really DO have a buttache, but it is not from writing the DN.

    35   I’m trying like hell to hit deadlines, which requires sitting down and grading long essays. 

    36   This causes a bunch of occupational hazards to surface: staple cuts, paper cuts, circulation concerns, and buttaches. 

    37   And teachers’ butts go wide, dude. 

    38   Just sayin’. 

    39   My buttache isn’t serious, at least not that I would know. 

    40   And there is a cure for it.

    41   It’s called exercise. 

    42   I went for a little walk, came back, got a pillow from the couch and a cold root beer, and all is well here in the 3 a.m.

    43   There is the comforting sound of some 30′s movie on in the other room. 

    44   Turner Classic Movies. Thank the Lord.

    45   No, you idiot. I do not see Ted Turner as the Lord. 

    46   But TCM is a fine product.

    47   And it has Robert Osborne as the host. He is great, at least in my eye.

    48   AND they bring Drew Barrymore in every once in a while to brighten things up.

    49   Drew is a descendant of the Barrymore family, so she brings a pretty sweet touch to the proceedings. 

    50   And it’s better than clicking some random video of what Jamie Lee Curtis looks like when she gets gussied up. 

    51  Bleh. 

    52  Enough of this. 

    53  Getting a buttache is a pain in the ass.

    54   The pillow helps, but now I’m getting some serious carpal.

    55   What I do in the name of journalism, I swear.

    56   AnywayZ

    57   Have a great Wednesday.

    58   If you have a meeting, cut it and head to the beach.

    59   See you again.

    60   Peace.

    ~H~

    www.xanga.com/bharrington

     

    a a a bus 9 drew 

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


  • a a a ref 3a a a ref 2a a a refs 1 The Daily News

    1   It’s awfully hard not to watch the officiating in the NFL these days. Jim Harbaugh brought it all to light when he threw not one, but TWO challenges that he clearly knew weren’t even legal.

    2   Last night’s touchdown by Seattle was one of the worst calls in NFL history.

    3   It’s tough because football fans are addicted to the sport. It is like watching real Avengers to a lot of them. When they invest their time and money watching this sham, it starts to make them look stupid. Make no mistake: this is officially a counterfeit season written by the scriptwriters of Rollerball.

    4   Maybe the fans should record something else, and the second a lousy play is called, change it up to “So You Think You Can Dance,” or maybe re-runs of “Dexter.”

    5   Hey NFL. End the lockout. These idiots had about two months to train, and they are probably getting death threats.The real refs are trained for five years.

    6  I haven’t really read about any of the issues in the dispute, just marginal stuff.

    7  Paying a bunch of  inexperienced scabs doesn’t play well with the NFL set, built originally with a blue-collar mentality

    8  The entire circus of substitute refs is starting to look really ridiculous. They should have them enter the stadium in a clown car. A lot of it isn’t so funny.

    9  People are finding out where these guys live and putting it on Twitter, Facebook, and all the other silly machines that have replaced our lives.

    10  Serious injuries are occurring because players and coaches no there are no rules, so they have to win by any means necessary.

    11  Somebody is going to get killed. 

    12  Just get on with it. Who wants to watch playoffs that were decided by horrible calls? This season is already a fake.

    13  Moving on, Part the First: Okay I’m over it.

    16  No, I am.

    17  Moving on, Part Two: It’s already too late. It wasn’t poor reffing that cost the Niners their game the other day; they clearly weren’t prepared for the Vikings. They were out of sorts. Harbaugh throwing fifteen restaurant napkins on the field did a lot to show everyone just how serious it all is. 

    18  Bill Belichick grabbing a ref showed us just how Rollerball this thing is becoming. 

    19  Maybe the fans should boycott this coming NFL weekend. Don’t go to the game. Season ticket holders should have a class action lawsuit for selling us a fake product. Everyone in the nation should tune into PBS and put their money into public television. 

    20  Because this season is a sham. 

    21  As a Niner season ticket holder, I am appalled that my money is supporting this imbecilic situation, which should have been handled months ago. 

    22  Boycott unprofessional football everybody. 

    23  Let’s start a movement. 

    24  Our flag could be a replay flag. 

    25  We could completely shut the NFL and its greedy owners down. 

    26  Let’s make it immediate. No More NFL. 

    27  Besides, I want to get famous, like Joey Chestnut.

    28  I’d rather watch a hot dog eating contest anyway. 

    29  Moving on, Part the Thoid: I’m up against the clock, and I don’t want an NFL ref at my classroom door throwing a yellow flag,  so  I have to make this a bit short. Here are a few more NFL replacement ref memes, and then I gottago:


    30   Peace.


    BOYCOTT THE NFL NOW!!!

    ~H~

    www.xanga.com/bharrington











  • a a a superman's pal 2 exhausted  a a a keith 4 muddy waters a a a keith 3 howlin' wolf

    The Daily News

    1   So music, and a history of some Stones’ tunes? Anybody down? I have it all right out of the mouth of Keith Richards. But first things first. Raiders beat Steelers? Niners lose to Vikings? Who woulda thunk? 

    2   The acquisition of Janikowski is turning out to look like a good move. The rising of Darrius Heyward-Bay’s arm yesterday was a call to arms for the Raiders. It was good to see.

    3    I listened to all the hype on the Niners all week, and like any other fan, I got caught up in it. Yesterday, however, it started to bother me. I drove up to my Dad’s for the day, and when I got inside, the first thing I said was, “All  of this hype about the invincibility of the Niners is cockeyed. They will have a game where they get blown away.” I wasn’t talking about the Vikiings, or doing some Nostradamus feat. It’s just that it has happened to many “invincible” teams over the decades. And…do you think Jim Harbaugh was trying to humiliate referee Ken Roan yesterday? What was THAT about? He didn’t know? Come now.

    4    When the Giants clinched their division the other night, I was pretty happy. Interestingly, it wasn’t nearly as fun as 2010, but it wasn’t nearly as exhausting either.

    5   Too many new issues. But I’m glad, at this point. They clearly ran the West. Bochy did some great things with the team. Did Buster Posey deserve the Willie Mac award? Damn straight. Does he deserve the MVP? I would have to say yes. Are the Giants invincible? Is anybody else? Questions.

    6   Moving On, Part the First: I have been off the Earth since Thursday, dude. Last week was everything I expected: ridiculous, exhausting, and relentless.

    7   We had one of the most negative staff meetings on Wednesday, filled with a lot of Dooooom and Glooooom. The meeting got so tense that some people shouted at the presenter while others walked out. That was pretty great for morale.

    8   The only people who remained were the people who are positive and hopeful. I stayed anyway.

    9   Thursday was Back-to-School Night, which is always exhausting but pretty energizing as well. I had two emails from parents thanking me for making them feel their kids were in competent hands. So I musta snowed ‘em. <lmao> <lol> <jk>

    10  Yeesh. What has happened to the world I used to know? By Friday I couldn’t see straight. I saw two of everything. I walked into walls the entire day. We dropped the opening kick on Monday and got stomped on all week. It was a tough one.

    11  This weekend I visited Dad two days in a row, but spent sixteen hours grading essays. I could grade essays, visit, watch football, and carry on perfectly normal conversations, but still, it does eventually numb the senses, especially after an unusually hectic and horrid week.

    12   Last night I was able to get to sleep by 9:30 but awakened at 1:30 a.m. because that’s sometimes what I do.

    13  <sigh> Insomnia. Fortunately Insomnia sometimes reminds me of thing. It reminded me of my ride up to Dad’s on Saturday, and what I was going to bring to today’s DN.

    14   Early Saturday morning, on the way to Dad’s, I needed some sort of music on the drive up. I didn’t know where my iPhone cord was, and had no CD’s in the Ol’ Timuh, my new ride.

    15  I knew that if there was a Bee Gees song on or something, I’d probably go into a tree, or shoot people with rubber bands and pencil erasers. So I popped on the radio in hopes of a miracle. 

    16  I hit the jackpot. The Rolling Stones’ classic “Sympathy for the Devil”  was on. I went loud. The drums, the riffs, the “Woo Woo’s!” Life has been hell, and this was by far THE greatest hell song ever written, and there have been many.

    17  It was such a gift. It is one of the greatest songs ever written, and with hell burning  around me all week, it was money. Up in flames money. I was on fire; I turned liquid. The song kept driving me to sanity. Just what the dear doctor ordered. Ladies and Gentlemen…

    18  Ironically, I had been re-visiting Keith Richards’ biography called Life earlier, right after I awakened. 

    19  I got to the backstory of the Rolling Stones’ classic “Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” one of the greatest live tunes in history. I got a little “Satisfaction,” “Street Fighting Man,” and parts of “Gimme Shelter” as well. And then some.

    20   Having worked in the sports/concert business for years, I have been a part of many Stones’ tours. They put on the best shows, over the years. I remember opening the door to the stadium one time and the music being so loud that I likened it to a jet taking off at the airport. Keith says the same thing in his book.

    21   Okay, so they’re geezers now. They STILL are musically and visually amazing. They are real rockers, the same Howlin’ Wolf and Muddy Waters were blues guys well into their older days. 

    22  I won’t argue about the Stones being the best, because I have been at the financial end of their success, and they brought in more money than any other performers over the years, bar none. Maybe some pop stars are making more now, but I doubt it. Selling merch at a Stones’ concert was always lucrative. 

    23  Devil’s money.

    24   They called themselves the Greatest Rock and Roll Band in the World, and they were right, at least when it came to making me some money. I never got rich working a Dead concert, for example, but I did get free pumpkin pie and veggie burritos from really nice hippy dudes. But I digress.

    25  AnywayZ…

    26  I read this passage about “Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” and how it all came about. I had planned on sharing it today, and so I think I will.

    27   Keith talked about how much the small cassette had fascinated him, and how he recorded some great songs using rudimentary technology. The cassette tape had just come out, and he was like a kid. That’s going back.

    28   We now have the iPhone 5, so it is funny to think of the cassette as something that was a breakthrough in rock, but at the time, to Keith, it was. He had heard stories of how old blues artists would get creative with cheap sounds. He loved the entire concept. Open tuning, washtubs, washboards, etc. They were very clean. Keep that sort of thing in mind as the story behind “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” and others comes at you this morning. 

    29   So here goes, some rock history for you to chew on here on Monday morning. These are Keith’s words:

       In the studio, I plugged the cassette into a little extension speaker and put a microphone in front of the extension speaker so it had a bit more breadth and depth, and put that on tape. That was the basic track. There are no electric instruments on “Street Fighting Man at all, apart from the bass, which I overdubbed later. All acoustic guitars. “Jumpin’Jack Flash” the same. I wish I could still do that, but they don’t build machines like that anymore. They put a limiter on it soon after that so you couldn’t overload it. Just as you’re getting off on something, they put a lock on it. The band all thought I was mad, and they sort of indulged me. But I heard a sound that I could get out of there. And Jimmy [Jimmy Miller, their newest and best producer] was onto it immediately. “Street Fighting Man,” “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” and half of “Gimme Shelter” were all made just like that. I used to layer guitar on guitar. Sometimes there are eight guitars on those tracks. You just mash ‘em up. Chalie Watt’s drums on “Street Fighting Man” are from this little 1930′s practice drummer’s kit, in a little suitcase you popped up, one tiny cymbal, a half-size tambourine that served as a snare, and that’s really what it was made on, made on rubbish, made in hotel rooms with our little toys.

       That was a magic discovery, but so were those riffs. These crucial, wonderful riffs that just came, I don’t know where from. I’m blessed with them and I can never get to the bottom of them. When you get a riff like “Flash” you get a great feeling of elation, a wicked glee. Of course, then comes the other thing of persuading people that it is as great as you actually know it is. You have to go through pooh-pooh. “Flash” is basically “Satisfaction” in reverse. Nearly all of these riffs are closely related. But if someone said, “You can play only one of your riffs ever again,” I’d say, “OK, give me ‘Flash.’ ” I love “Satisfaction” dearly and everything, but those chords are pretty much a derigueur course as far as songwriting goes. But “Flash” is particularly interesting. “It’s allllll right now.” It’s almost Arabic, or very old, archaic, classical, the chord setups you could only hear on Gregorian chants or something like that. And it’s that weird mixture of your actual rock and roll and at the same time this weird echo of very, very ancient music that you don’t even know. It’s much older than I am, and that’s unbelievable! It’s like a recall of something, and I don’t know where it came from. 

       But I know where the lyrics came from. They came from a gray dawn at Redlands. Mick and I had been up all night, it was raining outside and there was the sound of heavy stomping rubber boots near the window, belonging to my gardener, Jack Dyer, a real country man from Sussex. It woke Mick up. He said, “What’s that?” I said, “Oh, that’s Jack. That’s Jumpin’ Jack.” I started to work around the phrase on the guitar, which was in open tuning, singing the phrase “Jumpin’ Jack.” Mick said, “Flash,” and suddenly we had the phrase with a great rhythm and ring to it. So we got to work on it and wrote it. 

       I can hear the whole band take off behind me every time I play “Flash”–there’s this sort of extra turbo overdrive. You jump on the riff and it plays you. We have ignition? OK, let’s go. Darryl Jones will be right next to me, on bass. “What are we on now, ‘Flash?’ OK, let’s go, one two three…” And then you don’t look at each other again, because you know you’re in for a ride now. It’ll always make you play it different, depending upon what tempo you’re in.

       Levitation is probably the closest analogy to what I feel–whether it’s “Jumpin’ Jack” or “Satisfaction” or “All Down the Line”–when I realize I’ve hit the right tempo and the band’s behind me. It’s like taking off in a Lear jet. I have no sense that my feet are touching the ground. I’m elevated to this other space. People say, “Why don’t you give it up?” I can’t retire until I croak. I don’t think they quite understand what I get out of this. I’m not doing it for the money or for you. I’m doing it for me. 

    30   I can relate. 

    31   Any musician can relate. Any person who loves what they do can relate.

    32   I’m not really a musician. I play around with a guitar, and love playing it, but I’m really not that good. 

    33   But I have performed that song with several bands, and Keith is eerily accurate on the levitation thing. A good jam with friends can do that. 

    34   I also did “Sympathy” in a huge jam on a Talent Show rehearsal years ago at YB. We had ex-Santana cats, rappers, choir people, and rockers all jamming “Sympathy” in one of the greatest jams ever. It just boomed. I played my twelve-string through a microphone. I’m guessing there are people out there reading this right now who remember that night. I sure do. 

    35  And Jumpin’ Jack Flash? It always works best with about a five- second delay before the opening riff.

    36  “I was born in a crossfire hurricahyne, and I howled at my ma in the drivin’ rain. But it’s allllll rhatttt now in fact it’s a gas…”,

    37  Music as soul food.

    38  Amen brothers.

    39  Okay we are again into the 3 a.m. fully, so I’m gonna back off this jive and wish you a good Monday.

    40  Fly low, yo.

    41  Hope you enjoyed the history lesson. I sure did.

    42  Peaceout.

    ~H~

    a a a cool guy 1

    www.xanga.com/bharrington

     

      

  • The Daily News

    1   Cheshire moon.

    2   I can’t write the DN today.

    3   Back-to-School Night last night.

    4   No sleep.

    5   Sorry about misspelling Tony Bennett in yesterday’s DN.

    6   I know how to spell Tony Bennett, by the way, but I was in a rush.

    7   I also re-read the piece and saw a bit of wordiness in it.

    8   Back-to-School Night went great last night, but to me, it is always one of the most exhausting days of the year.

    9   I had full crowds for each of my periods. The parents were wonderfully supportive and in tune.

    10  It was a great night at the school.

    11  But I am exhausted. I prepare for this from the first day of school. To me it is important that good communication exists between parents, guardians, and staff.

    12  I say staff because ALL of us are teachers. Any staff member to me is a part of the teaching. They know how the game is played, and so do the kids.

    13  They amaze me.

    14   AnywayZ…

    15   I think I’m outta here. It just has to be a quick one.

    16   Have a good weekend.

    17   Sorry Tony, for the misspelling.

    18   And go Giants!

    19   We clinch this weekend baby!

    20   See you again.

    ~H~


    www.xanga.com/bharrington

     

     

  •  

    The Daily News

    a a a random german couple obviously in love 1

    1   Batman Live.

    2   Opens tonight at the HP.

    3   7:30.

    4   Tix begin at around $21 and go up from there, but I’m certainly curious.

    5    It is tonight and tomorrow night at 7:30, and Saturday and Sunday at 11 a.m., 3 p.m. and 7 p.m.

    6   The reviews from Great Britain were dazzling.

    7   The Merc called it “…part stunt show, part video-light show, part circus (done by England’s well-known Circus Space) and part stage show.”

    8   Right when I complained of no real news.

    9   Batman Live baby.

    10  The Joker, Riddler, Catwoman, Penquin and Poison Ivy will be on hand, according to the Merc Blurb.

    11  Batman Live. I’m stoked, whatever that means. 

    12   Moving On, Part One: I love Thursdays because the Eye comes to my door via the Merc.

    13   The Eye has entertainment news.

    14    After first looking past the Batman Live ad, I ruffled through it to see that a bunch of the old geezers (Neil Young, Leonard Cohen, Joe Walsh, etc.) are touring, but not this weekend. 

    15   Jason Mraz and Christina Perri will be at the HP next Friday AND at the Greek on October 4, but that’s in the future. The tour, incidentally, is called Tour is a Four Letter Word. 

    16   I loves that guy.

    17  There is so much going on it’s almost impossible to report it here at 6:30 in the a.m. 

    18   Moving on, Part the Second: The Monterey Jazz Festival goes up this weekend as well, closing Saturday Night with 86-year old crooner Tony Bennet. Other performers in the order of the Merc will consist of: pianist/keyboard guyTigran Hamasyan, Jose James and Gregory Porter, Mulgrew Miller, Eddie Palmieri, Antonio Sanchez and Migration, Christian Scott, Trombone Shorty and Orleans Avenue; Robert Randolph and the Family Band, Marcus Gilmore, and a host of others. 

    19  Unfortunately, the Eye doesn’t come close to the San Francisco Chronicle’s Sunday pink section, which includes vast coverage of the Bay Area theatre scene. In fact, it is now pretty difficult to find theatre coverage at all in the Eye

    20  I have been way too busy to really rustle that stuff up, so all apologies to my local theatre friends. 

    21  Moving On, Part the Thoid: I have figured out a good way to know if I am late for work.

    22  First, you must understand that no two clocks in my house tell the same time. I have one that I rely on, but it isn’t consistent with real time. It’s a little ahead so that psychologically I will THINK it is later than it is.

    23  I generally get out the door at about the same time each morning, but the clock in my car seems always to be inconsistent.

    24  Once I am on the road, I think of nothing more than to get myself safely from Point A to Point B, despite all the imbeciles on the freeways and byways.

    25  Once I get into the area of my school, I go backroads to get to the school. I found this great little route that nobody goes near, and come in right where I need to park, with everything being my right-of-way.

    26  I find myself talking to the other cars. “Uh, I don’t think so Mac!” “Hey underpants, it’s my right-of-way, NOT yours!” “Neener, neener, neener.”

    27  Walter Fookin’ Mitty unfurled.

    28  I usually see kids walking to school, and I realized that I will make it if I see a few of them, because they are like a little German street-clock.

    a a a random german couple obviously in love 2 H clock

     

    29  If I turn up one street, for example, I am sure to run into Indian Jesus, this kid with a long beard. I didn’t think high school kids could get that hairy, but dude looks just like Jesus, I swear to you.

    30  If I see him, you can bet that School Girl will be in the picture within a minute.

    31  Schoolgirl is this girl with stringy hair, glasses, and a backpack that looks like she is going to stay a week in Desolation.

    32  I could grade students easily by just looking at their backpacks, I swear to you.

    33  Schoolgirl is a scholar, no question.

    34  When I make my final turn to have my nose on the edge of the school, I look for this awesome student I had last year. If she is up Quimby Road, I am WAY on time. If she is turning the corner to the school, I’m pretty close. If I see her head disappearing into a building, I had better book it.

    35   You should try it sometime. Just locate peeps on the streets, give three of them names, and you could throw away your watch.

    36   I swear.

    37   And you could goof on other drivers, and call the idiots out.

    38   I loves living me in my own head sometimes.

    39   Anyway, my own little German street-clock tells me that I had better wrap this up.

    40   Have a great day.

    41   Batman Live.

    42   Be there.

    43   Peace.

    ~H~

    a a a cool guy 1 

    www.xanga.com/bharrington









     

  • The Daily News
    1   Wow.

    2   Romney.

    3   Really dude? 

    4   If you are a Romney fan, then yesterday’s news released by Mother Jones would have to have been an embarrassment.

    5   Welp, it is what it is.

    6   I’ll stay apolitical on that one, but really?

    7   Scary stuff.
    8   Those are not politically wise things to be coming out of the mouth of a presidential candidate.

    9   I’ll stop there, because I’m pretty flabbergasted.
    10  Moving on, Part the First: I heard on the radio this morning that the Chicago teachers’ strike has ended. Anytime a strike ends, it is a good thing.

    11  Any time a strike ends, we also have to wonder why it ever began.

    12  Union bashing has become hip, and for the life of me I don’t understand why.

    13   It’s all a bunch of propaganda, but you can’t tell people that because propaganda now works. 

    14   If anyone knows the slightest thing about education, they might know that a strike just looks bad for everybody. Nowadays unions and management, at least in education, don’t need bad press.

    15  Schools need money. Period. It is expensive times, and schools are trying to live on budgets that are ten years old.

    16   But no school district wants bad press, and no teachers’ union wants that either. 
    17   Modern union/management negotiations are usually a case of compromise and peaceful co-existence. 

    18   If either faction has some egomaniac trying to push an idiotic agenda, war breaks out. 

    19   So I don’t really understand all the union bashing. That strike in Chicago had a definite anti-teacher news bent, which is a bit alarming.

    20   The article in this morning’s Merc News by reporters Monica Davey and Steven Yaccino said little about the specific collaboration, but used disturbingly anti-union words to color their “reporting.”

    21   Look at this, for example. It is directly from the article: 

    While a halt to the teacher’s strike, this city’s first in a quarter century, may end the immediate local contract fight over job security, teacher evaluations, pay and working conditions, the episode brought to the forefront larger questions, still unanswered, about the philosophical direction of public education, a national agenda for change, and the potency of unions.

    22  


    23   That, ladies and gentlemen, is how propaganda works. It is subtle. But the paragraph looks clearly anti-union.

    24  Let’s break it down. First, the overall article never informed us of what was settled. 

    25   Second, the issue of job security is germane to the effectiveness of a good teacher. The move nowadays is to tie teacher evaluations and job security to test scores.

    26   At my school, I’m safe. I teach at a school that has a lot of parent support and a focus on learning as a top priority. My test scores will give me job security. 

    27   Another teacher teaching in an inner-city school in economic decline may have poorer parents who have to have two jobs, and maybe their sons and daughters have to focus on home issues, and may even have to take on part-time jobs just to survive. 

    28  Their test scores are clearly not going to be as high as at my school. At “tougher schools, even the higher performing students are going to be put in classrooms that might be out of control, because the lives of them and their peers are out of control.  

    29  Tie that to low pay and working conditions, and you get a picture of what is really happening all over the nation. 

    30   The “potency of unions” is simply something that can assure a teacher that he or she is protected from being judged on things that are socio-economical issues, and not on their effectiveness as teachers. Most of those teachers are dedicated professionals working hard to combat those issues. 

    31   Here is another quote:

    And although the political players in this fight were Chicagoans–some saw it as a highly personal standoff between Mayor Rahm Emanual, a democrat in his first term as mayor, and Karen Lewis, the Chicago Teachers Union president–the matter swept in national politics as well. Even though the schools were closed all over President Barack Obama’s hometown, he did not publicly take sides in a showdown that pitted Emanual, his former chief of staff, against labor, a bloc that Democrats depend on in election years like this one.

    32   Yeah, THAT’S not political. The “bloc” sandwiched between President Barack Obama and Democrats must have been coincidental.

    33   In my lifetime, the only time I have ever seen the word “bloc” is when somebody is talking about Russia, or socialism. As a kid, I always heard about the “Soviet bloc,” whatever he heck that is. 
    34   There’s much more, but on the surface, this article suggests to me that unions should be blown up and scattered to the winds, and that our president is clearly a socialist. 

    35   Propaganda, baby. You gotta love it. 

    40   And I maintain that I am staying apolitical here. These are just issues that came out in the “news” lately. 

    41   Chew on it and get back to me. 

    42   As a hard-working teacher, I’m a bit incensed at the reporting of that strike. It smacks of a political agenda, and of the subtlety of propaganda.

    43   Frankly I think those two reporters need to change their diapers, or get into another line of work. Like McDonald’s. 

    44   Moving on, Part the Second: Anybody coming at me?

    45   Meanwhile, in the REAL world of edumacation, we English nerds have been told that we need to inject way more non-fiction reading into the curriculum. 

    46   They say that like they want us to teach extremely boring things so that students can learn to write mechanically and to understand college gobbledygook. 

    47   Fine with me. 

    48   Fine with lots of teachers. 

    49   This morning, for example, I found an old copy of Jim Garrison’s On the Trail of the Assassins, an explosive expose by the New Orleans DA who had to investigate Lee Harvey Oswald, the alleged assassin of John F. Kennedy. 

    50   For those of you who don’t know, Oswald was the guy that the “government” concluded shot and killed Kennedy on November 22, 1963. A report came out of this called the Warren report, after Chief Justice Earl Warren, who headed the committee.

    51   They concluded that Oswald was a lone gunman, upset with his life, who just lost it and killed Kennedy with a rifle shot from the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository. 

    52   Garrison was dragged into this mire when he had to investigate contacts of Oswald, who lived in New Orleans prior to the assassination.

    53   I’ll keep it short, but the book goes into his investigation, which started to reveal CIA contacts, mafia, and anti-Castro Cubans popping out of manholes all around the intelligence community in New Orleans. Oswald chilled in that area, and had chillingly odd contacts with a community of spies, extremists, fascists, and other sordid people.

    54   Garrison’s story is riveting, and his efforts to get to the bottom of the story had him painted as a headline hunter and a kook. 

    55   I don’t believe that is the case, and that piece of non-fiction is more non-fiction than the ridiculously fictitious and made-up Warren Report. 
    56   I used to teach the JFK assassination as a November unit. At some point I had to eliminate it because of curricular demands.

    57   I’m thinking of going back into the case, which I solved years ago. 

    58   It would certainly dovetail with the conspiracy theories that are all over the internet nowadays.

    59   As I stated earlier, I am, of course, apolitical.

    60   Thanks for listening. We’re going in. 

    61    Peaceout. 

    ~H~



    www.xanga.com/bharrington














     
  • a a a superman's pal 1 jimmy olsen marries supergirl

    a a a bugs 1a a a action comics number 1 first appearance of superman a a a earth 1a a a just a remindera a a superman's pal 4 perry white screaming at olsen a a a teachers5 miss landersa a a superman's pal 3 a day in the life  a a a rita hayworth femme fatale a a a pie 1 a a a hubris 2 greek a a a caitlin pretty bride and bridesmaids 5 gideon lincecum a a a teacher 1a a a mtn view art umbrella 1          The Daily News

    1    So how do you spell “hubris?”

    2    I spent the entire weekend making absolutely sure that I would not have what people affectionetly call “The Mondays.”

    3    I worked all weekend, truly sixteen hours, to make sure I would be on top of my game yesterday.

    4    While taking care of my Dad I was still able to work sixteen hours on Saturday and Sunday grading papers and making sure that I was tanned, rested and ready for Monday.

    5    I even took the vocabulary lists that I tweaked at Dad’s to Fed Ex so that I wouldn’t have to worry about walking  into the school on a Monday morning and lining up behind a slow or jammed copy machine.

    6    I had it all down.

     7   I had Monday conquered.

    8    Yee-uh!

    9    The hubris had me walking pretty tall.

    10   I love working an entire weekend and then coming in on Monday morning ready to throw the kitchen sink at my students.

    11   I also have a secret sort of “I outplayed you!” to teachers who come in on Mondays unprepared and slackjawed.

    a a a superman's pal 2 exhausted

    12   I went in yesterday with a chip on my shoulder that if frozen, could have sunk the Titanic.

    13   Dude.

    14    I worked hard, and I was struttin’.

    15    I felt the same way the 49ers must be feeling right now. I was going to win the Super Bowl of education: coming in on the Monday of Back-to-School week completely prepared and ready to conquer.

    16   We have Back-to-School night this Thursday. Traditionally, it is one of the toughest weeks around, because that day becomes a fourteen-hour day if we get to bed early. I will awaken at four or five a.m. and begin my work day, and I will be at school until at least 9:30.

    17   So I had I decided to get myself well prepared, and yesterday morning I had already graded almost two reams of papers AND gone to Fed-Ex to run the two brand new vocabulary lists AND left fifteen minutes earlier just in case anything would screw me up. 

    18   Walkin’ tall man.

    19   I got in early, put all my papers and stuff down, organized everything, and just as the bell rang, reached into my bag to pull out the two vocabulary lists, the main course of my Monday lesson.

    20   I reached into my bag, and instead of two stacks of vocab lists, there was only one. 

    21   

    a a a the name is bond

     

    22  I have no idea where my first class’s stack went. I still don’t. But it was gone.

    23  I don’t believe in bad days, so I just took out my flash drive, which for some reason didn’t have the list. 

    24

    a a a no 5 fly girl

     

    25  Not panicking, I simply took a list from last year, changed its title to Vocabulary 1, tweaked it a little, and pushed print.

    26  The paper went through the printer. I had three minutes to get this done. 

    27  The paper came out blank. My printer was out of ink. 

    28   

    a a a you are here 1

     

    29   I don’t believe in bad days. I believe that sometimes a series of things might go wrong, but I don’t believe in bad days.

    30   I grabbed a stack of blank paper and with flash drive in hand, flew down to the copy room. I could print from the flash drive, right?

    31

    a a a huh 1

     

    32  I put my flash drive into the copier and then searched for my document.

    33  The copier decided that it would just show me five of my documents. If I scrolled up or down it would show only five. I don’t usually copy that way because I have had difficulties before.

    34   The bell was now ringing for our first period of the day and I had a stack of blank papers to hand out. 

    35   I wound up being tardy for my first class. I looked like a first-year rookie. I looked disheveled and disorganized, despite all the work and training I did. 

    36   Hubris. 

    37   I asked the students to take out a blank sheet of paper, explained what had happened, which I’m reasonably certain none of them believed, and then asked for a volunteer with nice handwriting to write the word list on the board so they could copy the vocabulary. 

    38   One kid shot his hand up and thankfully volunteered. Here is his word list, which I used throughout the day:

    39  

    a a a caitlin pretty bride and bridesmaids screech

     40   I still don’t believe in bad days.

    41   I do believe in hubris.

    42   No news.

    43   Moving on, Part One: Speaking of which, I saw this headline in the back of the Merc News last week:

    44   Any journalists out there?
     
    45   Classic. I remember learning about that one when Perry White used to yell at Jimmy Olsen about no-news stories.

    46   He would scream at Jimmy Olsen that if a dog bites a man, it is not news. If a man bites a dog, it is. 

    47   How Jimmy Olsen ever got hired is a mystery to me. 

    48   When I saw that headline the other day, it was impossible not to think of Jimmy Olsen.

    50   I couldn’t really find a pic of White saying that to Olsen, but over the years, that has been a cliché for bad journalism. 

    51   Moving on, Part Two: Speaking of which, I’m pretty certain that most of today’s readers are probably a bit weary of bad journalism.

    52   I gotta get on my horse and try to screw up this day too, so I think I’m gonna ride off into the sunset, even though it is 5:45 in the a.m.
    53   So you have yourself a great Tuesday.

    54   See you again.

    55   Peace.

    ~H~


    www.xanga.com/bharrington













     
     

     

     

     

     

     

  • The Daily News
    1   This morning’s sports’ headline in the Merc News: 49ers New Bully on the Block.

    2   Yeesh.

    3    I thought the same thing when I watched yesterday’s game.

    4    But I had been reading essays about teen bullying, among other topics. Many of the students saw bullying as an extremely important issue, much to their credit.

    5    I graded papers while watching the game and I kept thinking that the Niners looked like school bullies.

    6    The team looks pretty well coached, but that might be because their coach is insane.

    7    I just thought it interesting that the Merc saw a bit of the same thing I did.

    8    Don’t get me wrong. I’m happy at the turnaround of the franchise.
    9    We suffered a lot of lousy years with inconceivable lousy coaches. 

    10   But a new stadium is bound to incite almost a Steinbrenner mentality with any sports’ franchise. 

    11   This one just happens to be working out.

    12    As a fan, I’m elated. Even with a team as almost perfect as the Niners, they can still fumble and flounder on any Sunday.

    13   I like what I’m seeing, but  man, that word “bully” just won’t go away. 

    13   I must have some sort of fear of success.

    14   Or I might just see that any mention of bullying is different today than it used to be. It is a really serious issue to teens, so it is almost not a good word to put into a newspaper headline.

    15   Ah, just going off here on a Monday morning.

    16   Moving On, Part One:  You have to wonder what is happening at American Idol headquarters. 

    17   Every time I think that show is going to disappear, it becomes a hydra and grows two more heads.

    18   The two new heads joining Mariah and the very odd Randy Jackson are rapper Nikki Minaj and country star Keith Urban. 

    19    Could save the franchise. They might be AmIdol bullies.

    20    I’m doubting it.

    21    I’m doubting it.

    22    We shall see.

    23   Moving on, Part the Second: You really have to wonder about Prince William’s wife Kate sunbathing nude in France. 

    24   Watchu thinking, Chica?

    25   So the young royals are suing Closer magazine, the periodical that was smart enough to snap up some pictures that would be sure to go around the world. 

    26   Good Lord.

    27   And these are YOUNG people. She had NO idea that someone might have tweeted the news?

    28   Some people don’t know how to live in glass houses. 

    29   What a moron. 

    30   I guess they have the money to sue, but really?

    31   The 99 percent are going to be up in arms. 

    32   Thank goodness there isn’t bigger news.

    33   Moving On, Part Three: The Chicago teacher’s strike gives all of us a preview of how teachers will be painted in the next few years.
    34   The propaganda is subtle, but the early messages are that teachers are greedy, and going on strike selfish. “They’re not even thinking about the kids!” is going to go mainstream, which is a shame.

    35   As a union rep, I can simply say that the teachers’ unions care much more about class sizes, crowded classrooms, lack of essential materials, and all the rest than do
    the people in charge. 

    36   I’ve watched this stuff for years. I never wanted to really be a union rep, but was approached by the union because of my years.

    37   I was elected last year and am proud to represent our school, and to make sure that we put students’ interests first.

    38   No matter what anybody tells me, public schools have the most professional, well-trained teachers anywhere. 
    39    I’m not going to go on a rant here, but it is obvious that what is happening in Chicago is manipulative and controlled by a media that wants big headlines. 

    40    So suddenly educators working ungodly hours already are being vilified.

    41    I spent sixteen hours this weekend grading papers while visiting my Dad. 

    42    Fortunately I could still talk with him and watch a little football. 

    43    I often work from darkness to darkness to keep up on all the planning, grading, and other tasks that come at me each week. 

    44    We haven’t had a raise since 2002. 

    45    Our class sizes are up to a minimum of 30, but we allow three more students per class in our contract. 

    46    Most teachers have more. 

    47    So when teachers reach the point of striking, it is with pretty good reason. 

    48    Like most Americans, we are working far beyond forty hours a week. 

    49    Unions and management generally want to avoid work stoppage. It never looks good to the public, and nothing but bad ever results from it. 

    50    I see Chicago as media propaganda, and pretty slick propaganda too. I don’t know if it is just to sell newspapers, or if something more insidious is going on, but that situation could be the beginning of the end of public education in America. 

    51    It is a frightening thought. 

    52    Moving on, Part the Fourth:  Okay, so I went on a rant.

    53    I’ll stop now. Rants do nothing anyway, except maybe that one honest rant might give a clearer picture of what is going on, especially from a person who has been there. 

    54    So this villain is going to call it a day. 

    55     Despite all that negativity, I fully intend to go in and to teach like what hair I have left is on fire. 

    56     You guys have an awesome Monday and hey!

    57     Fly low man.

    58     Peace.

    ~H~



    www.xanga.com/bharrington