Posts tagged ‘Dylan’

October 17th, 2012

Hip vs. Square

by PaulM

I’m sure that I’m not the first one to make note of this, but one aspect of this election is fundamentally about style: hip versus square. I don’t think Gov. Romney would quarrel with this characterization. He is comfortable in his own skin. As the weeks wear on, however, and as we see more of the two men in the same frame at debates, the difference between the two candidates is striking. Sometimes it seems as if President Obama is running against his father. Gov. Romney is a ’60s person who wasn’t, and President Obama is so post-’60s that he more or less defies labels. Romney was 20 years old during the Summer of Love in 1967. The President was six. And while GOP vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan says Rage Against the Machine is his favorite band (Tom Morello can’t figure that out), the national Republicans in general come across as preferring an orderly Mitch Miller sing-along where everyone knows his or her part.  I know New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie loves Springsteen, who, apparently, doesn’t love him back. Gov. Romney lists as his likes the Beach Boys, The Killers, Garth Brooks, and Aerosmith, not what I expected to find on the ‘net. The Governor enjoys water sports.

The Obamas rub elbows with Beyonce and Jay-Z, a scene with a lot of improvisation.  We also know the President likes Bruce, Stevie Wonder, Charlie Parker, Sheryl Crow, and Dylan. He’s a basketball and poker guy. As parents they are pretty much no-nonsense in raising their children, but they make being responsible seem “cool”—like doing homework, planting a garden of healthy vegetables, and exercising.

So, despite all the crucial policy differences between the President and the challenger, there is the important “je ne sais quoi” of style that separates the two camps. I’m thinking about silent-majority-type Archie Bunker and his liberal, anti-war son-in-law Mike Stivic of “All in the Family”—but Mitt Romney is so much smoother and more confident than Archie. He would be the boss of Archie’s boss. And yet the cultural chasm between those two sit-com characters was as big as the one between the Romneys and the Obamas. The differences show up in attitudes about women’s rights, immigration, same-sex marriage, even our sense of community. Will America vote “hip” or “square” in November?

I like John Kerry, but for all his intellect and sophistication, I think he was seen as less hip than George W. Bush, who had a swagger and a grin. Reagan was so square he was hip in his own way, being a Hollywood guy. He’d cock his head and win over the audience. Jimmy Carter was hipper than Gerry Ford, being such a wild card. That was when “born again” was a Democratic thing. Bill Clinton was more hip than Paul Tsongas in 1992, and cooler with his shades and sax than President George H. W. Bush, the war hero, who is now a cool ex-President who sky-dives. Mike Dukakis? Not cool. But competent. Nixon vs. Humphrey and McGovern? Not going to go there.

Web illustration courtesy of utopianrealms.org

June 26th, 2010

SUN on Local Cultural Treasures

by PaulM

For any community, its cultural treasures come in different forms. Sometimes the treasure is a distinctive building or place in nature and sometimes it comes in the form of a living cultural treasure. Today’s SUN has two stories, somewhat related, about cultural treasures in the city. One story details the effort underway to restore and preserve the Way of the Cross at the Lady of Lourdes Grotto behind the Franco American School. Sen. Steve Panagiotakos is leading a campaign to raise $150,000 to fully restore this extraordinary sacred space. People of all faiths and spiritual persuasions value the “Stations” and the Grotto as a place to meditate and reflect. This is an internationally known religious site due in large part to Jack Kerouac’s writings about it. Read Rita Savard’s article here, and consider subscribing to the SUN if you appreciate the writing. Donations to the community fundraising campaign can be sent to the Franco American School, 357 Pawtucket Street, Lowell, MA 01854.

In a related article, Nancye Tuttle profiles Cecile Provencher, the 2010 Franco American of the Year, a well-deserved award for a woman who has contributed in many ways to the preservation of French Canadian-American culture in the community.  Read the article here.

Bob Dylan at "The Grotto," 1975