T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
258.1 | I predict ... | STAR::BECK | $LINK/SHAR SWORD.OBJ/EXE=PLOWSHR.EXE | Thu Jul 26 1990 17:15 | 1 |
| ... a constitutional amendment in the works ...
|
258.2 | | ROLL::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Thu Jul 26 1990 17:31 | 3 |
| One of the Red Hot Chili Peppers mooning Tipper Gore.
Lisa
|
258.4 | Puke | MAMTS5::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Fri Jul 27 1990 09:21 | 5 |
|
She's a class act alright.
Mike
|
258.5 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Fri Jul 27 1990 09:43 | 2 |
| I think she's hysterical.
Linda
|
258.6 | Social comment from one with nothing much to say | HEFTY::CHARBONND | ain't no Prince Charming | Fri Jul 27 1990 09:51 | 5 |
| re.4 >She's a class act alright.
If it wasn't for low-class she'd have no class. I only wish
somebody would have slapped her face afterwards. Another name
for my personal boycott list.
|
258.7 | Interesting development... ;^) | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Fri Jul 27 1990 09:52 | 13 |
|
RE: .4 Mike Wannemacher
> -< Puke >-
> She's a class act alright.
In Mennotes yesterday (in the Andrew Dice Clay topic,) you stated
that you feel sorry for people who are unable to laugh at themselves
as people or as a stereotyped group.
I notice that you aren't laughing now yourself.
|
258.8 | not everyone can sing...lighten up | SSVAX2::KATZ | What's your damage? | Fri Jul 27 1990 10:07 | 7 |
| just listen to her speaking voice...it should be obvious that she can't
sing. if they wanted a good singing rendition, they should've hired
Jessye Norman.
I mean, I love my father, but I wouldn't want him singing in public!
daniel
|
258.9 | | JUPTR::CRITZ | LeMond Wins '86,'89,'90 TdF | Fri Jul 27 1990 10:54 | 22 |
| RE: 258.8
Daniel,
Regarding speaking voice and singing voice...
After I returned from Vietnam, I spent my leave time at
my mother's. One evening, she asked me if I wanted to
watch the Jim Nabors show with her. I said, "You mean
Gomer Pyle has a show. What's he do?" When she said
"Sing," I almost died laughing.
I said, "How can a person that talks like that sing?"
When he started singing, I just kinda sat there, open-
mouthed and amazed.
I do agree, though, if they want someone with a tremendous
voice, get Jessye Norman or Kathleen Battle, or any number
of woman/men/....
Scott
|
258.10 | | WMOIS::S_LECLAIR | | Fri Jul 27 1990 10:55 | 6 |
| Out national anthem is difficult to play or sing for the best of
musicians so why would anyone expect Roseanne to do it any better?
Perhaps she was making some sort of statement to that effect?
Then again, maybe it was just all in fun. I think she's hilarious.
Sue
|
258.11 | | JUPTR::CRITZ | LeMond Wins '86,'89,'90 TdF | Fri Jul 27 1990 10:58 | 12 |
| RE: 258.10
I agree about difficult to sing.
Maybe, like many advocate, we ought to can the current
NA and get one that's easier to sing and doesn't glorify
war and battle.
America, the Beautiful, or something like that would do
nicely.
Scott
|
258.12 | Reverence for the irreverent | CTCSYS::SULLIVAN | The Revolution will not be televised. | Fri Jul 27 1990 11:07 | 9 |
|
Gee, and I thought the interesting part was how she touched her
crotch and spat on the field -- you know, just like a ball player.
I've never heard anyone make our National Anthem sound good. In fact,
back when I was thinking about becoming a singer, I thought, wow, if
I can make the National Anthem sound good, I'll have really arrived.
Good thing I still have this day job, eh?
Justine
|
258.13 | if the players can do it... | SSVAX2::KATZ | What's your damage? | Fri Jul 27 1990 11:15 | 19 |
| re: -.1
*grin* That song is bloddy impossible to sing! It reminds me of
Forbidden Broadway's parody of Man of La Mancha..
"To sing, the unreachable note!"
Yeah, I thought the crotch gesture and spit were just imitating ball
players too. How many times can you watch a ball game and see camera
shots of players just standing there, happily scratching their
crotches?
it is to die for...and with the President of Czchekoslovakia meeting
with Kurt Waldheim at Salzburg, they run this as a top story on the 11
o'clock news?
yeah, right.
daniel
|
258.14 | OH BEAUTIFUL! | NUPE::HAMPTON | If you do it too much, you'll get diabetes! | Fri Jul 27 1990 11:21 | 8 |
| re .11
>America, the Beautiful, or something like that would do
>nicely.
I agree totally! Especially if it is sung by Ray Charles!
-Hamp
|
258.15 | | SANDS::MAXHAM | Snort when you laugh! | Fri Jul 27 1990 11:45 | 4 |
| I don't know how she sings, but I love the story about her
imitating the Ball Player Scratch'n Spit. What a riot!
Kathy
|
258.16 | the song stinks | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | gather flowers under fire | Fri Jul 27 1990 11:47 | 6 |
| re .12, what about Jimi Hendrix? That sounded pretty good.
(Well,you're too young to remember, Justine, but you've probably seen
the movie.)
Lorna
|
258.18 | 'course, Linda & Ray can sing anything they want! | ULTRA::THIGPEN | You can't dance and stay uptight | Fri Jul 27 1990 11:51 | 19 |
| Roseanne didn't sing, or even attempt to. She screeched. It may have
been social commentary, but whether or no it was awful to listen to.
I interpreted the crotch grab and spitting as a gesture of contempt for
the crowd, most of which was booing her at the time. I've watched
enough baseball to have rolled my eyes heavenward about a million times
when the players do similar things, but while pretty gross and in poor
taste they are clearly not expressing contempt.
YES THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER can be sung well! And even correctly!
(pet peeve: it's not 'ba-a-ner-er ye-et wa-ave'
it's 'baa -ner-er ye-et wa-ave' :')
Linda Rondstat sang it stupendously to open a Red Sox game once. And
as previously noted Ray Charles did a fantastic job. Mostly it's
merely ok. Fairly often I can top it, even with a sore throat. Yes it
is hard to sing, you need a good range and the ability to hear the
pitch of your own voice, but it can be done. Especially if you're
trying.
|
258.19 | They told her to do that.... | MEMORY::MORELLO | | Fri Jul 27 1990 12:38 | 7 |
| I heard on the news today that they asked her to grab her crotch and
spit like the ball players. She mentioned that maybe she did do it
just a little to close to finishing the song, but she was anxious to
get out of there.
Therese
|
258.20 | | MAMTS5::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Fri Jul 27 1990 12:47 | 5 |
| Suzanne,
Please exscuse my patriotism. It is a rare commodity these days.
Mike
|
258.21 | | CGHUB::SHIELDS | | Fri Jul 27 1990 12:52 | 6 |
| Personally I thought it was VERY poor taste! The singing and the
crotch grabbing.
Disgusted!
|
258.22 | "Roseanne, you picked a great week/month for this!!" ;^) | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Fri Jul 27 1990 13:23 | 16 |
| RE: .20 Mike Wannemacher
> Please exscuse my patriotism. It is a rare commodity these days.
Not to worry, Mike. I was just teasing you (in my earlier note.)
I've already resigned myself to the double standard involved with
being told that if we DON'T laugh at Andrew Dice Clay, then we must
not have the ability to laugh at ourselves - but that if we DO laugh
at Roseanne's song, then we must not care about our country.
One way or another, there's a steep price to be paid if fail to laugh
(or insist on laughing) at comic moments without the express direction
from The Guide to Political Correctness For the Politically Incorrect.
Sorry if I forgot to salute. ;^)
|
258.23 | barf | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Jul 27 1990 13:29 | 12 |
|
re .22, Dice Clay -
Our media have a long tradition of making fun of women. In the 19th
century, cartoonists had a field day when women went around in bloomers
instead of the usual acreage of skirts, and when they started serving on
juries, and when they (gasp) tried to get the vote...these days, it seems,
women are there for chuckles just because they're women.
There must be money in it,
Dorian
|
258.24 | | SONATA::ERVIN | Roots & Wings... | Fri Jul 27 1990 13:39 | 16 |
| Or, as an alternate national anthem...
How about: Material Girl?
Only we could change all the words to gender neutral words...
"We are living in a material world,
And I am a material person..."
Kinda catchy, yes? And clearly, given the salaries that these
crotch-scratching, tobacco-spitting ball players receive, I think that
some version of Material Girl is far more appropriate than all that
smarmy talk about patriotism. And if you want politically
correct...hey, you've got it all. After all, we print, "In God We
Trust" all over our money!
|
258.25 | put her out of our misery | POCUS::NORDELL | | Fri Jul 27 1990 14:07 | 11 |
| I had the TODAY show on yesterday while getting ready for work and
heard this awful noise coming from the living room. I was sure
my cat had his paw caught in something. NOPE! It was Roseanne
singing the National Anthem. Then I thought... "My cat sounds better
than her singing when he is in pain!"
Pretty soon the TV will be hawking her album "Roseanne's Greatest
Hits" on one of those 900 numbers!
Susan
|
258.26 | | SANDS::MAXHAM | Snort when you laugh! | Fri Jul 27 1990 14:31 | 6 |
| Roseanne Barr is known for being a comedian, not a singer. I'm
surprised she was even asked to sing the National Anthem.
Unless, of course, they wanted exactly what they got.....
Kathy
|
258.27 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Fri Jul 27 1990 15:22 | 8 |
| But seriously folks. I think it was something that she thought was
going to be funny that backfired. She should just tell "the untold
story" (although we'll probably get it next week in the Inquirer)
instead of making up excuses. I've heard several excuses so far, none
of them from Roseanne.
Mike
|
258.28 | I wish I'd seen and heard it | COGITO::SULLIVAN | The Revolution will not be televised. | Fri Jul 27 1990 15:44 | 12 |
|
It could be that something that she thought would be funny backfired
if you consider the reaction of the crowd at the game. Or maybe
she was playing to a larger audience? Kind of like John Silber's
remark about Gloria Steinem -- he certainly knew he would get booed
by the women and men who were there to hear a debate on women's issues,
but maybe he thought it would play well in the Boston Herald and with
the folks he's trying to attract.
Justine -- hmm I wonder what RB would say if she knew I compared her
to John Silber...
|
258.29 | what did they ask for? | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Fri Jul 27 1990 19:11 | 9 |
| Now just what did these folks expect when they asked a commediene that
doesn't sing to do this? Get real, nobody thought this would be a
serious rendition of the song. As for the crotch grab, out local news
refered to it as an *obscene* gesture. Why is it obscene for her but
OK for the big bucks ball players. She didn't even have any body parts
to grab there.
I agree with Lorna, I've always loved the Hendrix version. At the time
he did it people thought *that* was obscene. liesl
|
258.30 | Go Roseanne!! (I liked her public statements on this, BTW.) | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Fri Jul 27 1990 20:00 | 37 |
| RE: .27 Mike Wannemacher
This gets funnier and funnier! (Not you, personally, but this
whole thing!)
>But seriously folks. I think it was something that she thought was
>going to be funny that backfired.
I love this! When Nora Dunn and Sinead O'Connor protested against
Andrew Dice Clay, a lot of people said that their gesture BACKFIRED
because Dice got so much attention for it. Many people said that
"no publicity is bad publicity" (and that he couldn't have PAID for
the kind of media exposure he got out of this thing.)
Now that we have Roseanne on the front page and headlining national
news - this time, the incident BACKFIRED AGAINST HER because
some people don't like what she did (with NO MENTION of all the
priceless publicity she's getting for all this, of course.)
I guess publicity only helps male entertainers, eh (and women
are subject to having things BACKFIRE on us whether we're the ones
complaining or the ones doing the thing some people find offensive.)
(By the way, I even love the whole concept of saying that things
"backfired" - it's a classic form of retaliation to claim that
someone's actions resulted in hurting themselves.)
> She should just tell "the untold story" (although we'll probably
> get it next week in the Inquirer) instead of making up excuses.
> I've heard several excuses so far, none of them from Roseanne.
I also love how anything said in favor of Roseanne is considered
"making up excuses." Whereas people were condemned quite loudly
for not finding the humor in Andrew Dice Clay, Roseanne needs to
have excuses for what she does.
This really is funny! ;^)
|
258.31 | | PROXY::SCHMIDT | Thinking globally, acting locally! | Fri Jul 27 1990 23:50 | 23 |
| I was more impressed by the reaction she's been getting than by the
incident itself, and I agree wholeheartedly that the contrast between
the reaction to Barre and the reaction to Clay is very instructive.
(Her profferred story, by the way, is that she starting getting booed
by the fourth note, considered whether she ought to just quit singing,
decided she couldn't do that and just decided to stay and rush her way
through the rest of it. She also stated that the spitting and crotch
grabbing was expressly meant as satire of the ball players' behavior.)
On the "McLaughlan Group", if Pat Buchanan called her fat once, he
must have said it a half-dozen times. As if that mattered. He also
called for a boycott of corporations that sponsor her tv show�.
His reaction was typical of most that I heard. Chett Curtis (on the
Boston TV-5 news) was similarly "kind".
Atlant
� Boycotts by right wingers are, of course, entirely appropriate economic
action. Boycotts by others are the unfair singling out of innocent
bystanders, among other things.
|
258.32 | | OFFSHR::BOYAJIAN | A Legendary Adventurer | Sat Jul 28 1990 05:18 | 19 |
| re:.9 (Jim Nabors)
I think your analogy doesn't hold water. I believe that the "Gomer
Pyle" voice is an affectation, and that Nabors actually speaks in
as good a voice as he sings.
re:.20
Please don't excuse personal taste with patriotism. You may find
what Barr did repugnant, but that doesn't make it unpatriotic.
re:.29
That's just right. A lot of people *did* think Hendrix's version
was "obscene" and "unpatriotic". Just as a lot of people thought
JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR was blasphemous and obscene for using
"filthy, disgusting *rock* music" when talking about the Lord.
--- jerry
|
258.33 | Another recent example of singing this songly poorly for comedy... | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Sat Jul 28 1990 20:56 | 15 |
|
Something else...
The movie "Naked Gun" featured a scene where a very terrible
singer butchered the National Anthem at a baseball game as
part of the comedy of the movie - and no one launched nation-
wide protests about the act being disgusting and/or unpatriotic.
I don't recall any mention being made of people being offended
when this male actor (and a Hollywood studio) wrote and filmed
this scene to be shown to millions and millions of people in
theatres, on cable and now available on videocassette.
Obviously, the big deal in the more recent incidence is that
Roseanne did it.
|
258.35 | It had me smiling all day Friday, that's for sure... | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Sun Jul 29 1990 17:50 | 13 |
|
RE: .34 Mike Z.
People at the ballpark were booing at Roseanne's song well before
she grabbed and spit - they booed her before she started screeching
the notes.
People can always think of excuses not to like what Roseanne did
- even if they put down others for not liking Andrew Dice Clay
(and I'm not referring to you here.)
It's a double standard (and a very nicely timed one.) ;^)
|
258.36 | | STKHLM::RYDEN | Dr of Comparative Irrelevance | Mon Jul 30 1990 09:34 | 9 |
|
<<< Note 258.20 by MAMTS5::MWANNEMACHER "let us pray to Him" >>>
>> Please exscuse my patriotism. It is a rare commodity these days.
You ought to be grateful for that...
Bo
|
258.37 | | JUPTR::CRITZ | LeMond Wins '86,'89,'90 TdF | Mon Jul 30 1990 10:13 | 10 |
| Friday, Roseanne and Tom were on CNN. She said something
to the effect that "People are making a big fuss about me
singing the NA and yet people are allowed to go out and
burn the flag, which I don't agree with.... I just want
all this to stop."
I figure that, if they wanted the NA sung well, they
woulda gotten someone with a track record as a singer.
Scott
|
258.39 | 8*) | SSVAX2::KATZ | What's your damage? | Mon Jul 30 1990 11:54 | 1 |
| depends upon what frequencies you can hear...
|
258.40 | ref: H. Beam Piper for the unenlightened | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Mon Jul 30 1990 12:24 | 5 |
| > depends upon what frequencies you can hear...
Yeah, all the Fuzzies in the audience loved it!
D!
|
258.41 | No one I know even watches the anthem part... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | Bernard Hinault with no eggs on | Mon Jul 30 1990 13:15 | 38 |
|
RE: showed artistic merit?
I think it had great artistic value. Much more than having someone
sing it 'properly' like has been done millions of times already.
For me it highlighted the stupidity of the whole thing. IT IS ONLY
A BASEBALL GAME!! Why does everyone take it so seriously (other
than REAL MEN taking sports very seriously, seemingly more seriously
than their wives and family in some older men I know).
It is only a REGIONAL baseball game. Why the hell do they sing a
NATIONAL anthem at a game anyway? Where did this come from? It is not an
international event. Why pledge oath to your country at a baseball
game? How did this originate? I've always felt that it was an extremely
stupid place to sing the national anthem. If anything it ridicules the
anthem itself (like playing it before a pool game or skate board
competition, making it less than serious). Didn't they do the same
thing in Nazi Germany, singing national anthems at every small
gathering or sports event. My European friends are amazed at the
blatant nationalism shown... at a trivial baseball GAME.
Artistic value - yes! I like what RB had to say in response, something
like 'Sorry. But if this has been the most tragic thing that has
happened in your life then I consider you a very lucky person who
should not be complaining about something so trivial'. I also liked
how the media called it an "obscene gesture." I wonder how many times
Pete Rose made "obscene gestures" on the field during his career. We
teach our boys that REAL American men always scratch their privates...
right after signing the National Anthem.
My reaction was "Good for you Rosanne!"
-Erik
PS- to call her unpatriotic makes me laugh. I think people had better
re-examine what being patriotic means. Linking patriotism to a baseball
game underscores the trivialization of loyalty to your country (not to
the NFL or NBA or the Chicago Cubs, but the COUNTRY).
|
258.42 | a female Benny Hill | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | in the dark the innocent can't see | Mon Jul 30 1990 13:27 | 3 |
| re .38>The performance was vulgar.
She's made a career of it. Lots of money. What's new ?
|
258.43 | No Kudos for Roseanne | USCTR2::DONOVAN | cutsie phrase or words of wisdom | Mon Jul 30 1990 23:40 | 4 |
| I don't even think Ms. Barr has exceptional talent. Her on-screen
hubby carries the show.
Kate
|
258.44 | | OFFSHR::BOYAJIAN | A Legendary Adventurer | Tue Jul 31 1990 02:01 | 6 |
| As another noter elsewhere points out...
So what happens now? Will Bush ask Congress to pass a Constitutional
amendment making it a crime to sing the national anthem off key?
--- jerry
|
258.45 | | GEMVAX::BUEHLER | | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:17 | 7 |
| Hmm,
Imagine this. Rosanne Barr, 5'2", eyes of blue, long blond hair,
one hundred pounds.
Would the reaction to her singing and actions be the same?
|
258.46 | garbage is garbage | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | in the dark the innocent can't see | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:19 | 2 |
| yes
|
258.48 | | SSVAX2::KATZ | What's your damage? | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:29 | 3 |
| uh, let's be fair, Maia is probably right.
daniel
|
258.49 | | GEMVAX::BUEHLER | | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:40 | 18 |
| Thanks Daniel.
Actually. I just asked you to imagine the scene. Would there be
a difference in reaction? I'm thinking of Charo who seems to
get lots of positive attention; also, the woman who periodically
runs out on the field to give the pitcher a kiss, and who then
is gently escorted off. Are they just sort of tolerated, thought of
as kinda cute and funny?
As far as Roseanne's 'obscene' gestures go--as said before, we
see it all the time on the field, the scratching, spitting out
globs of tobacco juice. Are the players desecrating the anthem,
the flag, the country by doing this? If not, then why do you assume
Roseanne descrated all that above by simply mimicking the players.
Play fair you guys.
Maia
|
258.51 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:48 | 16 |
|
As I see it, she's a "bad woman" - not living up to society's
expectations of proper womanhood - on four counts:
1. She's fat
2. She made fun of the (bombs bursting in air) national anthem
3. She made fun of baseball
4. She made fun of men
Not that long ago, she'd have been burned as a witch.
D.
|
258.52 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | in the dark the innocent can't see | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:52 | 7 |
| Charo, when not playing the ditz, actually is a very talented
performer. Check out her guitar playing if you can.
The 'reaction' wasn't to Ms. Barr's appearance but to her
hatchet-job on the national-anthem. Believe it or not, some
people won't take that kind of crap from anyone, attractive
or otherwise. Loni Anderson would have gotten the same treatment.
|
258.53 | I haven't seen a lot of things | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:55 | 23 |
| Not just because "she's female," but because she's considered to be an
unattractive female and because her popularity has been going WAY down
already. I think Maia has a point -- if it had been Dolly Parton,
people would have been laughing and clapping at the grab'n'spit
routine, because the crowd would have given her the benefit of the
doubt to begin with.
I think the brouhaha about this is completely overreacting.
She was asked to sing and she can't sing.
People started booing her.
She's a stand-up comedian and her first reaction to a booing crowd was
to camp it up and try to go for laughs.
She failed.
Big deal.
It was a flopped joke, in my estimation, not a deliberately planned and
executed desecration of our sacred flag and our hallowed national
anthem, both of which are taken too seriously at sporting events, in my
opinion. It's not like she has incorporated flag desecration into a
stand-up routine she does every night!
Pam
|
258.54 | It was just soooo cute. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:58 | 12 |
| Sorry. In response to that "five foot two, eyes of blue" image,
all I could think of was:
"A hundred and one
pound of fun,
that's my little
honeybun."
sung by Mary Martin while dancing inside a naval seaman's uniform
in "South Pacific".
Ann B.
|
258.55 | what if the "kissing bandit" did it? | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Jul 31 1990 11:38 | 1 |
|
|
258.56 | Oh lighten up! | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Tue Jul 31 1990 11:44 | 54 |
|
Aw, come on. What if Dice were singing at the Miss America Pageant
and threw in a "Dice-ism" or 2? Would the world be angry at him for
trashing such a sacred institution? Nope. (Well maybe Bert Parks might
be angry). But the rest of the world would be laughing at the
contestants who expressed anger, brushing them off with a "What did you
expect?" The joke's on the boys this time, tho. Whoa! Major hassle
time. Who does she think she is! Get the Today show in on this one!
Blah, blah, blah. 2 Live Crew, Mapplethorpe and Dice have "freedom of
expression". Gee, what a coincidence - all male! (well, ok, Mapple-
thorpe's on the edge since his targets aren't women),
But that's enough freedom of expression. We've made the gesture so
let's not carry this freedom thing too far - certainly not to females
or at least certainly not to *fat* females who don't display the proper
deference and respect to all that men hold dear. Sure, a man can burn
the flag to make a statement but should a [fat] woman be allowed to
"burn" the anthem? And at a baseball game, no less?? Well since
Roseanne, (and not Dolly or Charo), has forced us into makine a decision,
it's decided that yes, trashing the anthem at a baseball game will be
considered far worse than flag burning on the anti-patriotism scale.
Now we can say it wasn't cuz it was Roseanne, (and cuz we just don't
like fat women who make fun of us and make us feel silly), it was cuz
the anthem was trashed.
And the average person who expects opinions to be given to him/her,
nods and glares at Roseanne. Ha! Women get upset at Dice and guys
just laugh and fully expect him to stay around. Men get upset at
Roseanne and women are expected not to laugh, (gasp!), but to take this
as seriously as men do and to see the "error" in Roseanne and further,
people fully expect that there will be some serious fallout from her
displeasing men, that her career will or at least should come to a
screeching halt because of it. But we do acknowledge that Dice's,
irreverance, (the man who trashes women and what women hold sacred,
remember?), is often funny, protected by the constitution and will bring
him great wealth. How can anyone miss the blatant double standard
here? How can anyone not see where men's priorities lie? Generally
with themselves, and themselves alone. It's your turn to be humiliated
now, guys. Just repeat for yourselves everything you've said to women
who complain about Dice. (and no, I'm not one of them - I love 'em
both!)
Hickory dickory dock,
Oh, how Roseanne can mock.
She sang at a game,
And increased her fame,
By giving ole' baseball a knock.
Hickory dickory dock,
Hoo boy, can that Roseanne mock!
The job was a botch,
So she grabbed at her crotch,
And gave the ole' boys a shock!
|
258.57 | | PARITY::DDAVIS | Long-cool woman in a black dress | Tue Jul 31 1990 11:54 | 8 |
| re: .56
Sandy,
All I can say is:
** EXCELLENT **
-Dotti
|
258.58 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | in the dark the innocent can't see | Tue Jul 31 1990 11:55 | 4 |
| re .56 Your reply totally ignores the possibility that there
are *women* who love this country and feel outrage at Ms. Barr's
actions. Last I heard love of country wasn't an exclusively
male emotion.
|
258.60 | | GEMVAX::BUEHLER | | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:00 | 6 |
| .58
For fear of sounding stupid, *what does love of country possibly
have to do with what Roseanne did?*
Hey, maybe she just had an itch?
|
258.61 | It was ONLY A BASEBALL GAME!! | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | Bernard Hinault with no eggs on | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:11 | 11 |
|
RE: .58
Love of one's country :== loving an idiotic baseball tradition??
This wasn't a Fourth of July commemoration to our country. It was a
meer baseball game. What if she had baked an untraditional apple
pie? GET REAL!
-Erik (who must be unpatriotic because he thinks baseball is one of
the most boring sports ever devised) <sarcasm>
|
258.63 | | GEMVAX::BUEHLER | | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:22 | 6 |
| well,
in your opinion I suppose. In my opinion, spitting on the ground
is messy and dirty, but sure doesn't show disrepect for the *country*
of all things.
|
258.64 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | in the dark the innocent can't see | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:28 | 1 |
| I was referring to the screeching of the national anthem.
|
258.65 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:36 | 10 |
| No, Dana, patriotism isn't exclusively male but it is predominantly
male. So what's your point? That it truly is patriotism that we're
talking about here? Remember when the "grownups" freaked out when
Peter Fonda wore a flag on the back of his motorcycle jacket? Oh, and
remember draft card burners? Well now *we're* the grownups. All of
you who are outraged at Roseanne - were you outraged at draft card
burners? Did you sign right up when you turned 18?
Irreverance always has been and always will be with us. The only ground
Roseanne broke is being a woman doing it.
|
258.66 | | CONURE::AMARTIN | MARRS needs women | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:57 | 35 |
| >Note 258.65
>GEMVAX::CICCOLINI
>That it truly is patriotism that we're
talking about here?
Gee, I thought so. She grabbed her crouch and spit, sort of like a
joke..ya know? like when all of the ball players do it?
>All of
>you who are outraged at Roseanne - were you outraged at draft card
>burners?
No, was too young then, but rest assured, I would have been!
>Did you sign right up when you turned 18?
um, no.. actually, I JOINED at 17!
>Irreverance always has been and always will be with us.
Maybe in YOUR opinion. People that are not so bent on gender wars
might feel otherwise.
>The only ground
>Roseanne broke is being a woman doing it.
Again, see above. You are LOOKING for a gender thing, when there isnt.
it is because she hacked the hell out of a symbol for freedom, thats
why.
IMHMO
^ "In my humble male opinion.
|
258.67 | symbols fade | SSVAX2::KATZ | What's your damage? | Tue Jul 31 1990 13:13 | 11 |
| > It is because she hacked the hell out of symbol for freedom
and aren't we glad she has the freedom to do just that? I'm much
happier that she has the freedom to do a number on the *symbol* than
I'll ever be upset that she did anything to the symbol -- jingoism
scares the willies out of me.
a few more cents,
daniel
|
258.68 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Amateur Engineering | Tue Jul 31 1990 13:28 | 25 |
| re .66. So, she can't sing. At least not by any standards I ever heard
of. So what? She was invited to sing the anthem at a baseball game.
This is not something that happens to a lot of people. She was probably
thrilled to be asked. THen she probably realizes that she can't sing a
note that wouldn't send a cat running for cover. What does she think?
Well, if it were me, I'd think, "Hey I'm a comic. Maybe if I make it
look as if I'm not trying, I'll get a laugh and maybe I'll be respected
for not botching it up as I would have if I actually tried to sing it.
Just for good measure, I'll throw in a crotch grab and spit on the
ground. Those are real baseball things to do and that'll get a laugh
too." The only problem here is that there are to many uptight citizens
out there that can't take a joke. It was simply a case of playing to a
nonreceptive audience and in the crotch and spit case, bad timing of
the joke. I'm sure that during her stand up routines in nightclubs, she
has run across nonreceptive audiences before. I don't think that being
a woman had anything to do with it. I would be horrified to find that
out. My word, we are hopefully pretty much an enlightened species
aren't we?
I do tend to ramble. I just don't think she trashed the anthem so much
as she gave it an interpretation. It didn't work except for me and a
few others. Hendrix did it at Woodstock and he was knocked, but today
it's a classic tune. It worked for me then too.
Phil
|
258.69 | this type of "patriotism" makes me puke | CADSE::MACKIN | We're still waiting for our data | Tue Jul 31 1990 13:42 | 6 |
| I didn't realize that if I sang the national anthem off key that I
would be considered unpatriotic. Maybe everyone who sings it off key
or every person who mispronounces the words of the Pledge of
Allegiance should be taken out back and summarily shot...
Jim
|
258.70 | | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Tue Jul 31 1990 14:08 | 18 |
| RE: <<< Note 258.47 by WAHOO::LEVESQUE "Resist me not; surrender" >>>
> Of course not! We stupid men who can only think with the smaller of
> our two heads would be creaming at the sounds of her howling. Why we'd
> be calling the station 100 times each to get them to replay the tape.
> it'd be the new replacement for Kate Smith's "God Bless America." We'd
> have posters made of this delightful creature. She'd be selling out
> stadiums across the globe where screaming men would throw their
> underwear at her. She'd instantly become the single most effective
> sales device, after all, no men can say no to a sexy woman, right?
> The reaction would be completely different, diametrically opposed even,
> because men could never, ever judge a woman's performance solely on the
> basis of that performance. men can only judge a woman's performance on
> the basis of how much he'd like to take her to bed. It's in the genes.
> men are simply incapable of being objective when it comes to women.
Trying to get laid, Mark???
|
258.72 | I presume you have that on CD, Mark. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Jul 31 1990 14:33 | 3 |
| I'd hate to think of you wearing out your little tune.
Ann B.
|
258.73 | "Hmmm.. What sounds worse than 'wailing...'" | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Tue Jul 31 1990 14:41 | 7 |
|
RE: .72 Ann
No chance of wearing it out.
He's still in the process of perfecting it.
|
258.74 | r & r | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Jul 31 1990 14:42 | 8 |
| .71,
"this file would have another topic for ranting and raving"...
what's that old saying about the kitchen? and what one does if there's
too much heat in it?
Dorian
|
258.76 | Did we forget - baseball is just a non-serious playful spiel? | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | Bernard Hinault with no eggs on | Tue Jul 31 1990 15:09 | 17 |
|
RE: .66
> it is because she hacked the hell out of a symbol for freedom, thats
> why.
Now we have Baseball = a symbol of freedom.
Oh goodness! Where do we find these people! :-)
[Maybe I fell alseep during the "baseball = symbol of freedom"
lecture in my political science classes. Maybe Congress should
include baseball uniform burning in the flag-burning bill. Can my
favorite sports of bicycle racing and swimming be included in the
Symbols of Freedom list too?]
|
258.77 | | IAMOK::ALFORD | I'd rather be fishing | Tue Jul 31 1990 15:10 | 22 |
|
I am amazed this has gone on soooo long! Honestly its just
unbelievable...i mean, its not as if there aren't 'real' problems
facing this country which should be addressed or anything....
I can't imagine why anyone would ask Roseanne to sing in the
first place, but once there, how could anyone expect anything
other than wild, bawdy, silliness? What would you expect from
George Carlin? or Bette Midler (though she can at least sing...
and i do think if all the brouhaha was about her she'd just
respond with her infamous line--"**ck 'em if they can't take a joke"
unpatriotic---nope
disgusting--nope
disgraceful--nope
hard on my ears--yes
silly and stupid--yes
funny--to some...like anything...
deb_sitting_here_shaking_my_head_in_disbelief....
|
258.78 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Tue Jul 31 1990 18:20 | 4 |
| re: -.1
Oh no, Bette Middler says "Hey, Mother F**ckers" and just leaves it at
that. it would have been a great intro to a "ball" game. :*) liesl
|
258.80 | <*** Moderator Response ***> | MOMCAT::TARBET | They call her The Devilish Mary. | Tue Jul 31 1990 19:34 | 2 |
| Might I remind everyone of 1.7 & 1.15? Nothing has crossed the line
yet, but some have come close.
|
258.81 | my opinion? 814 | MILKWY::JLUDGATE | someone shot our innocence | Tue Jul 31 1990 19:49 | 16 |
|
re: .34
/ That gesture can be taken as an overt act of disrespect for a
/ national symbol, like desecrating a flag.
somebody get me a match, i want to practice my constitutional
right to make a political statement
oh come on......can't ya take a joke?
(besides, burning a flag would allow people to legally beat me up...
they would have to pay a $50 fee...i mean FINE...for the privilege)
|
258.82 | | FSHQA2::AWASKOM | | Tue Jul 31 1990 20:06 | 29 |
| Somehow, I have mercifully not heard Roseann's rendition of the anthem,
but I can imagine it.
Some of the controversy is a result of the city where the performance
took place (as has been pointed out elsewhere). San Diego has a *huge*
military population, both active and retired. Those folks get serious
about their symbols, because in that environment they have real meaning
- folks die to rescue the flag. Good, bad, or indifferent, that's the
culture they live in. Similarly, the national anthem is played and/or
sung a lot more often on post than off, and military members (and their
families) are expected to be *very respectful* when it is heard. If
you aren't, it is grounds for disciplinary action.
This mind-set carried into the ball park at that location. Even the
ballplayers stand at attention during the anthem, and don't scratch,
spit or what have you until they have moved away from the spot they
stood on during it's playing. From what I can tell from the popular
descriptions, Roseanne followed her rendition of the anthem with her
'joke' almost immediately. She goofed, she didn't consider the
audience, nor did she do enough research to figure out how to make it
come off as a joke. Team management goofed in asking her to perform;
they didn't consider the talents of the individual for the job to be
done.
Hopefully, everyone involved has learned a lesson, and we can go
forward from here with some dignity by refusing to give the incident
more weight than it deserves.
Alison
|
258.83 | | CONURE::AMARTIN | MARRS needs women | Tue Jul 31 1990 20:23 | 29 |
| Although Mike Z has already made it clear, I felt it was my dute as a
mobster to point out exactly what it looks like to see a persons words
twisted to fit another persons meaning;
>Note 258.76
>CYCLST::DEBRIAE
>RE: .66
>> it is because she hacked the hell out of a symbol for freedom, thats
>> why.
> Now we have Baseball = a symbol of freedom.
> Oh goodness! Where do we find these people! :-)
> [Maybe I fell alseep during the "baseball = symbol of freedom"
> lecture in my political science classes. Maybe Congress should
> include baseball uniform burning in the flag-burning bill. Can my
> favorite sports of bicycle racing and swimming be included in the
> Symbols of Freedom list too?]
now, if you didn't twist my meaning so darn hard... would you have been
able to enter your note? I thought not. NEXT!
|
258.84 | Great Rhyme | USCTR2::DONOVAN | cutsie phrase or words of wisdom | Tue Jul 31 1990 23:13 | 6 |
| re:.56
Sandy, I loved that nursery rhyme. May I have permission to send it to
around to a few friends? I'll delete your name if you wish.
Kate
|
258.85 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | Tis not so deep as a well | Wed Aug 01 1990 11:24 | 4 |
| Alison, I remeber Rosanne moving away from the spot she stood on before
spitting and scratching. It's a nit, but it's interesting how well she
parallelled accepted baseball practice.
Mez
|
258.86 | Oh, my! | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Aug 01 1990 11:37 | 8 |
| She didn't scratch or spit during the National Anthem.
She didn't scratch or spit where she sang the National Anthem.
And still someone protests that she trashed the National Anthem.
And still someone protests that he was misrepresented by equating
baseball to the National Anthem.
And still some man is willing to back him up.
Ann B.
|
258.87 | A sacred national song = a theme song for baseball games too?? | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | Bernard Hinault with no eggs on | Wed Aug 01 1990 11:39 | 45 |
| RE: .83
Both my notes were heavy on the sarcasm. But perhaps you could help
to enlighten me on a practice I've never understood anyway...
Q. If the National Anthem is a serious performance of scared national
value (which I think it is), WHY is it being played at a *baseball*
game?
Q. How and why did this start?
Q. Doesn't this seem like a cheap way of lending significance to an
otherwise trivial local ballgame, like a used car salesman using the
gimmick of playing the national anthem every time he sells a car to a
customer? Doesn't this cheapen a sacred *national* symbol, something
which should be kept in honor and played only during worthy occasions
such as NATIONAL events. I personally am insulted that the National
Anthem is dregraded to such a trivial status and cheapened so, even
though I'm not a blatantly nationalistic type of person.
Q. Would the impact be any less for you if it were also not-so-well
sung at a quilting bee or skateboard competition?
I viewed RB's action as a spoof on how seriously everyone takes
baseball and on the 'sport' (aka game) itself. To untangle the
National Anthem from being associated with the trivialness of
baseball, it should NOT be played at a baseball game in the first
place.
If RB did this at a war memorial, an international event, a national
event, Fourth of July celebration, or any other celebration which ties
into pride for or honoring our country, I would feel differently.
That was my question, not meaning to twist around your words (unless I
interpretted them wrongly). It just seemed to me that people were
equating the environment of a baseball game to that of a major
important national event. If someone gave a major international
diplomatic speech at a baseball game I wouldn't take it as seriously
as one from the White House or another serious setting either.
Just my viewpoint, feel free to disagree...
-Erik
|
258.88 | | GEMVAX::BUEHLER | | Wed Aug 01 1990 11:43 | 14 |
| s'more,
And the reason, she stuck her fingers in her ears and screeched the
anthem is that the PA (?) system was reverberating in her ears...
Roseanne Barr is obviously not popular with many because she's
not afraid to say what she thinks, she's not afraid to be irreverent,
she's not afraid to be fat (in fact, she prefers the weight gain
according to an interview with Barbara Walters), she simply defies the
stereotypical role that most Hollywood women succumb to. Ironically,
these same "attributes" are what made her popular in the beginning--the
fact that she wasn't afraid to be blunt and irreverent. Now, people
are turning against her for those same things.
|
258.89 | | SSVAX2::KATZ | What's your damage? | Wed Aug 01 1990 12:37 | 10 |
| They started singing the anthem at sporting events during WW II to
boost morale.
It kinda stuck.
Like velcro
or...I'll stop now!
daniel
|
258.90 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Aug 01 1990 13:23 | 16 |
| 1) Barr sang the Anthem and acted just the way I'd expect her to sing the
Anthem and act.
2) Whoever invited her should be taking the heat, not her. If she was asked
because she was a personality, whoever did the asking shold have expected
that personality to show up, not some "reformed" personality. On the flip
side, Barr should have assumed that if she was asked because she was a
personality, she should show that personality and not some "reformed"
personality.
She shold not have been asked in the first place (IMHO), but the fact she was
is not her fault.
My $0.02.
Roak
|
258.91 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Wed Aug 01 1990 14:14 | 4 |
| In regards to the military and the national anthem. They even play it
in the movie theaters on base, just before the film starts. You are
"required" to stand for it. I often wondered why that was considered a
vital part of base life. liesl
|
258.92 | | CONURE::AMARTIN | MARRS needs women | Thu Aug 02 1990 10:13 | 7 |
| .87
I believe that baseball is considered the "national pastime", or "as
American as apple pie".. the National Anthem signifies that
"Americanism" (gee, such a word?)
|
258.93 | | COMET::BOWERMAN | | Thu Aug 02 1990 18:20 | 42 |
| When I was younger and went to shows on base(Military brat) We
always had to stand up for the Anthem at the beginning of the show.
This was the first music video I had ever seen. Pics of the flags
waving and beautiful American scenery ,including the four presidents
carved in the stone, American Cities(no slums). Its possible that
this practice still exists. If so I can under stand why the Military
community is upset.
While in Germany I took my German friend to
a show and she was mortified that we took the flag so seriously
(shades of Hitler as she tried to explain later). I tried to
explain that we were showing respect to a symbol of our freedom.
She relaxed a little. I told her to pretend its the Olympics and
the Americans won first place. I believe that every person who can
does stand to show respect for the winning teams flags and Anthem.
I have no problem respecting or showing that respect I feel for
our countries symbols. I do feel that they are symbols. I do feel that
I have better things to do with my time that worry about someone else's
attempt at humor or disrespect. I don't care to judge whether it was
one or the other. I don't perceive that Roseanne is
a dangerous individual to my or my country's safety. I can't tell her
or any one what she should believe or not believe or how to feel.
I feel that what she did has less significance than the people
who get elected in our body of government to use our system to
increase their power and the bulge of their pockets and those of
their friends and their families.
I do perceive many government officials as dangerous to my country's
stability and my personal safety. They work for their own good and
the good of those that give them money. The people who have no
money to give are on the bottom of their list of groups to take
care of.
Well I said my two cents worth and I did smile when I saw the
'Barr-spectical' on the news.
She has gotten a lot of publicity from it. I think It worked.
Janet
|
258.94 | | OFFSHR::BOYAJIAN | A Legendary Adventurer | Fri Aug 03 1990 01:28 | 8 |
| re:.93
I agree with you completely. I respect our country's symbols, too.
But I have greater respect for the concepts that they symbolize.
And I feel that the symbols should *never* be held with greater
esteem than the principles they represent.
--- jerry
|
258.95 | Well, well. | 24853::CICCOLINI | | Tue Aug 07 1990 14:38 | 29 |
| > I believe that baseball is considered the "national pastime",
How can something that basically appeals to only one sex, (and allows
only one sex to participate), be considered "national"? Who considers
it national anyway? It strikes me as much a "special interest" kind of
thing as quilting or rock climbing. That was sarcastic, in case you
missed it. I know quite well that it's men who decide what is and what
is not "national", worthy or serious and that they simply pick from
*their* list only and women, (in the background - always in the back-
ground), just get to divide into who goes along with the boys and who
doesn't. And for all you nitpickers, I am well aware that there are a
few females who genuinely love baseball and a few males who genuinely
hate it. My point is that men decided that since the majority of
*them* loved it, they would imbue it with all kinds of seriousness and
symbolism and declare it "national" regardless of what the half of the
nation that is female thinks. And now some are upset to find out what
some of the other half of the nation really thinks. Perhaps they
should have consulted or at least considered women in the first place
before setting themselves up to have their "great national symbol"
humiliated by one. What did they expect? Total and complete
acquiesence by all women to all they pronounce as good? This furor
makes me think so.
Kate, sorry I haven't replied sooner but go ahead and do whatever you
want with that little ditty, with or without my name attached. In case
you haven't seen Dice's HBO special on video, I patterned it after his
nursery rhymes. That may or may not affect your decision to use it or
even like it! ;-)
|
258.96 | | 4629::LEVESQUE | Better by you, better than me | Tue Aug 07 1990 15:48 | 10 |
| >Total and complete
> acquiesence by all women to all they pronounce as good? This furor
> makes me think so.
I think the "furor" is orthogonal to the game, and would have been equally
or perhaps even more vociferous had the incident occurred at the women's ice
skating championships or any other event that traditionally includes the singing
of the national anthem. Your mileage may vary.
The Doctah
|
258.97 | Easy on the big words - it's late in the day! | 24853::CICCOLINI | | Tue Aug 07 1990 17:00 | 9 |
| Hey, c'mon, Doctah, "orthogonal" isn't in my dictionary, only the Greek
root "ortho" which seems to mean "correct". I hate not being able to
assimilate a new word. Please define and also include accent marks.
Or-THOG-o-nal? Orth-o-GON-al?
And yeah, my mileage varies somewhat. I think the ones most stung by
this are men who are generally more heavy into patriotic symbolism than
are women. So even if it took place at a woman's event, I still don't
think women would take it as personally as many men seem to.
|
258.98 | This reply is orthogonal to the topic note
| 19584::BECK | $LINK/SHAR SWORD.OBJ/EXE=PLOWSHR.EXE | Tue Aug 07 1990 17:18 | 11 |
| It's pronounced "Or-THOG-o-nal", and generally derives from geometry, where it
means "perpendicular to". I was surprised that it's not in my dictionary,
either. But it does appear in my thesaurus:
213.12 perpendicular, plumb, straight-up-and-down, straight-up, up-and-down;
sheer, steep, precipitous, plunging; right-angled, right-angle, right-angular,
orthogonal, orthodiagonal.
In vernacular terms, it means "having nothing to do with that"; i.e. the
question of where to hold the meeting is generally orthogonal to the question
of the meeting's subject matter (but not always).
|
258.100 | | 4629::LEVESQUE | Better by you, better than me | Tue Aug 07 1990 17:39 | 27 |
| Paul gave an acceptable definition and the correct pronunciation.
> And yeah, my mileage varies somewhat. I think the ones most stung by
> this are men who are generally more heavy into patriotic symbolism than
> are women. So even if it took place at a woman's event, I still don't
> think women would take it as personally as many men seem to.
Probably not, but the people who get upset at the disparagement of patriotic
symbolism would certainly be upset by such an action wherever it occurred.
I can understand the reactions of veterans who literally risked their lives
for our country's freedom when they see people denouncing the country. I don't
think any of them feel that the country is perfect, but it's still a damn site
better than most any other place. I think that one thing that must be remembered
is that the reactions are almost strictly emotional in nature. There is no
tribunal that sits and thinks of things for men to be offended by. The reactions
are spontaneous and emotional and are related to feelings far more than
a conscious position. When I see someone getting upset by a flag burner or
someone who butchers the national anthem, I see someone saying "Hey, you're
hurting me! Please stop!" And when that someone is one who put on the fatigues
and went to war, I have to give them respect for their feelings about that.
It's all well and good for us to sit behind terminals and talk about symbolism
etc, but when that symbolism is one of the few things that got our men through
armed conflict, I think we ought to give those symbols some respect, or at
least understand those who do.
The Doctah
|
258.101 | on my high horse | 28984::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Tue Aug 07 1990 18:00 | 28 |
| Mark, While I agree in some part with what you are saying my personal
experience makes me believe that all too often the symbol becomes the
reality to many people. They may fight for the symbol but not what it
stands for. That's the entire heart of the flag burning issue. It also
seems to lead to the "my country right or wrong", "love it or leave it"
and whatever other jingoism a ruling elite uses to sell a war to the
masses.
Symbols are vital to human beings, it's the basis for speech. They're
shorthand for complex ideas. But they *can not* replace what they stand
for and should not be treated as if they were the same thing.
I admire many members of the armed forces. I've known a lot, starting
with my mom who was a Navy nurse on a hospital ship in WWII. I was in
the Air Force for a brief time. The services for all their good points
do not teach free thinking, they teach conformity and obeying orders.
This is the same thing the world over, being in the military is in some
ways like living in a communist country. The symbols and the hierachy
become the inviolate while the inidvidual's rights disapear.
I think people should be screaming and booing defense contractors that
ship faulty or defective equipment. Government officials who use their
power for the personal financial gain of themselves and their friends.
These people are tearing apart the fabric of our society and laying
waste to the *symbols* of trust, honesty, and decency.
I don't care about how Rosanne Barr sings (or doesn't) the national
anthem. Her act harmed nothing. liesl
|
258.102 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Tue Aug 07 1990 19:30 | 8 |
| Another technical meaning of orthogonal is varying independently.
This comes from the meaning "perpendicular" through the use of
orthogonal axes to define a co-ordinate system (x-y axes on a
graph). The two axes are orthogonal (perpendicular), and the
variables they represent are said to be orthogonal if they vary
independently. This gives rise to the meaning "independant".
--David (college math major)
|
258.103 | World Series?? | CUPCSG::RUSSELL | | Tue Aug 07 1990 19:58 | 16 |
| RE: some notes back (.97?)
Baseball is probably considered a national sport by the same folks who
consider the last game of playoffs between the American League and the
National League to be the World Series.
So what if it excludes a few million people?
********
Me, I kinda like baseball and am NOT offended by Roseann Barr. There's
a wealth of jokes about the anthem and baseball (Jos�, can you see?
last words are play ball, antiphony of "get yer red hots", etc.) so it
seems as if the anthem was not sacred until someone deliberately
sang it off key.
|
258.105 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Wed Aug 08 1990 10:17 | 8 |
| What about playful respect? Does respect mean that you always have
to be serious and grim? As a parent do you get angry if your kids
make fun of you?
There is a big leap from making fun of the song we have chosen for
our national anthem and making fun of baseball -> making fun of
our country. I just don't make that leap.
Linda
|
258.107 | just wondering | JURAN::TEASDALE | | Wed Aug 08 1990 14:03 | 21 |
| Did ya ever notice how no one short of Robert Merrill or Kiri Te Kanawa
can *really* sing the Star Spangled Banner?
Did ya ever notice how no one short of Robert Merrill or Kiri Te Kanawa
can *really* sing the Star Spangled Banner?
Did ya ever notice how no one short of Robert Merrill or Kiri Te Kanawa
can *really* sing the Star Spangled Banner?
Didya ever notice how no one short of Robert Merrill or Kiri Te Kanawa
can *really* sing the Star Spangled Banner?
Does anybody else get nauseous when the camera zooms in on a ball
player spitting a mouthful of tobacco juice and saliva? I need to spit
sometimes, too, but I don't do it in public.
I like baseball, but I don't understand why someone hasn't invented a
device to allow players to be comfortable and not have to grab their
crotches all the time. What can I say? A bra is probably equally as
uncomfortable and now that I have to wear one (thank god only
temporarily) I'm adjusting all the time, too.
Nancy aka Andy Rooney
|
258.108 | | JURAN::TEASDALE | | Wed Aug 08 1990 14:05 | 3 |
| re -1
Sorry, didn't mean to hammer that one home.
|
258.110 | Started in pubs | COLBIN::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Wed Aug 08 1990 20:34 | 16 |
| RE: .108
Heck, the darn thing is based on an English drinking song, and you
probably have to be either Operatic Material or schnockered to sing it.
[Reminds me of the time that the pianist of my Rainbow Girl assembly
didn't bring her sheet music to an Installation (public event with
moms, dads, guests present). She started it in the wrong key (too high,
dontcha know) and the screeching was something to behold. As in
Be Holding Your Ears.]
I mean really, it's meant to be sung while swinging a Pint back and
forth. Kinda brings it back down to earth a little, eh?
--DE
|
258.111 | | ULTRA::KENDALL | | Thu Aug 09 1990 09:27 | 2 |
| I remember a few years ago Smokey Robinson sang the anthem in Boston as
a ballad. It was the best rendition I'd ever heard.
|
258.112 | crotch grabbing | DEMING::COULOMBE | | Wed Oct 03 1990 09:14 | 4 |
| I agree that the crotch grabbing was in bad taste but maybe
it will stop the ball players from doing the same.....
Why are men so itchy, is it the cup they have to wear for
protection?
|
258.113 | | NRUG::MARTIN | Lets turn this MUTHA OUT! | Wed Oct 03 1990 10:01 | 4 |
| YEs it IS the cup, ever wear one? taint very comfortable.
Although I do think that they do go a tad too far with it, it almost
seems habitual sometimes.
|
258.114 | Rosie needs a Cup for her mouth | DEMING::COULOMBE | | Wed Oct 03 1990 10:18 | 5 |
| NO, I haven't but my sons did playing sports in school and
after - semipro. I don't think they itched as much as
the players on T.V. do?!?
Betty
|
258.115 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Danger! Do Not Reverse Polarity! | Thu Oct 04 1990 04:56 | 10 |
| A couple of weeks ago, I happened to catch THE NAKED GUN on
cable. The denouement takes place during a baseball game, and
at one point, the pitcher spits. Then one of the other players
spits. Then another. Then another. Then people in the dugouts.
Then various of the fans in the bleachers. And so on. It was
probably amusing when the film was in its initial release, but
in the aftermath of the Barr-Mangled Banner boondoggle, it was
hilarious.
--- jerry
|