Monday, April 23, 2007

Rock N' Roll Glory Story #1




by Dale Nixon

It was the winter of 1988.

My punk band S.V.O.E. (Shrieking Void of Emptiness) was revved up for our first "tour".

Well, not exactly a tour, but a single out-of-state show booked in Harrisburg, Penn. by a summer camp friend of our singer Brett Gustafson (now a high school principal in NYC's Chinatown). We were slated to appear with legendary D.C. rawk-punk band Scream along with a couple of local bands. The excitement was palpable; a bona fide road trip with a legitimate touring band. And because we were an out-of-state band, we would get the slot right in front of Scream on the bill, a rare honor for a band used to playing about 10 minutes before the doors of the club were actually unlocked.

I was still playing bass at the time and we loaded half of our equipment into the Toyota pickup of our drummer and the other half went into the Isuzu Trooper of our singer. Our tongue-twisting name was based on a comment of my evangelical born-again Big Value Supermarket boss known semi-affectionately as PumpkinHead, who had stated in one of his Sunday morning rants that "anyone without Jesus in his life had a shrieking void of emptiness".

Not knowing at the time how long band names stuck, nor how many times in intervening years it would have to be explained, we decided this would make a cool moniker. Especially since three of us spent each day with Catholic dogma being tattooed onto our skulls by the Boston-accented-boy-touchers known as the Army of the Pope; the Jesuits. To summarize Jesuit doctrine, pre-marital sex was very, very bad. As was abortion, contraceptives and any other sort of ungodly apparatus, including, but not limited to, other types of Christians, Jews and other assorted heathens.

Bad also most definitely applied to our self-taught musicianship, or lack thereof, but we were in high school, it was a band and we had a gig 350 miles away and parental permission to hit the road.

After a long slog through the coal-mining hills of Central Pennsylvania, we arrived at the club to find our name on the outdoor sign. Somehow the name of the club escapes me, but it was something like Club Tropicale, although I may somehow be confusing it with the chicken chain Pollo Tropical. In any case, it was a glitzy club with a sort of cheap tiki motif, painted blacklight palm trees on the wall and believe it or not a stage with lighting and a fairly decent PA system. By cheap tiki, there was no 50's retro look, it was a combination of free Hawaiian style beer distributor promos, neon bar light amd some sort of palm-trees-in-the-Sahara montage mural on all four walls.

Midnight, it seemed, would be at the Oasis.

Thanks to Google, I actually just found the club, and it has since been turned into a shady strip joint that mysteriously burned down.

20 years of bad karma, coming to get'cha!

But the biggest surprise was that there seemed to be an actual "crowd" waiting to get into the club. Now, if I may digress for just a second, in those days "crowd" at an all-ages show meant about a hundred dudes and two women, usually girlfriends of local band members.

The gender-fication of punk/hardcore did not happen until at least 10 years later and girls at this time were scarcer than, well, the number of females we saw daily at our all boys high school.

Yes, there were actual girls waiting to get into the show. Not haggard purple-mohawked punk rock chicks with plaid Johnny Rotten pants, but honest-to-goodness attractive, unattached high school girls. Probably of Pennsylvania Dutch descent. And if there are two things the PennDutch do well - natural blue-eyed blondes and pretzels would be 1) and 1a) on the list.

We are ushered to the backstage area where we meet Scream, who were already unloading their white van. The brotherly tag team of singer Pete Stahl (who would later end up in Wool and Goatsnake) and guitarist Franz Stahl seemed less than impressed that our own rag-tag band of high schoolers-with-one older dude would be opening for them, as did cigarette-huffing guitarist Robert Lee (Harley) Davidson, who resembled Keith Richards circa Sticky Fingers. Much more amiable was drummer Dave Grohl, who was closer to our age than the Stahl brothers and enthusiastic, even to the point of joining our beer run.

We hit the stage in front of, oh, maybe 350 people. The rough equivalent of the entire room at our high school prom. We played better than we ever had before, or at least it seemed that way, as energy, adrenaline and nerves combined with a few well-placed double agents in the crowd to get people into it. Girls in front of the stage, in front of our amps, while we played. The culmination of years of basement black mold inhalation and rock n' roll wet dreams.

Of course, all bets were off when Scream's rock n' roll juggernaut hit the stage with a fury. Tight. Fast. Melodic. Hooks and guitar leads beyond our comprehension. Jaws collectively hit the floor. Fillings were shaken loose by the relentless pounding of Grohl, a dervish who hit with the fury of Bonham and the speed of Dave Lombardo. The bar, it seems, had been raised. Tight and professional, with songs both powerful and dynamic, Scream had it all.

All, we would come to find out, except their $300 guarantee. We had been promised $100 in travel expenses, but probably would have settled for $50 to pay for our hotel room at the Ramada.

The show promoter, our aforementioned friend, was psyched with the turnout. The PA guy, it seemed, would be paid. The bands would be paid. The club would take their cut. There might even be a few bucks to throw into the kitty for the next show.

We trooped into the club owner's office to pick up our funds, as visions of our case of Budweiser, hotel rooms and potential groupies danced in our heads. The club owner, however, had other plans. First, he berated us as we asked for money in some semi-understandable middle eastern dialect, his gold chains clanking as sweat beads popped off the vein in his forehead while he screamed.

Then, Pete Stahl repeated his request for Scream's guarantee, pointing to the all-too-apparent six-inch high pile of $5's and $10's on the club owner's desk. Pete offered the opinion that the bands would not be ready to leave until we all got our cut of the door, which had been collected not by our friend Tom, but the club owner's greasy-looking brother. The owner then yelled over to another of his brothers (a bartender), who seemed to materialize like an apparition from somewhere in the wall, although he had probably just walked through an Al Capone door camouflaged in the paint of the office.

The brother, was brandishing a loaded, fully automatic M-16 (pre-assault weapon ban). It pointed in our general direction, and screamed at us in no uncertain terms to "get the faaaaaaccccckkkkkkk out of our club, now!"

Needless to say, there was no guarantee for any bands that night.

But it was a good punk rock story.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

The Lost Art of Journalism



by Dale Nixon

Broadcast news journalism has become the equivalent of instant coffee.

Equal parts watery and vapid, yet also murky and aromatic. Smelling of real ingredients, but seldom tasting the same. Style over substance.

The recent tragic events (plural, as it turned out) at Virginia Tech University have revealed a startling subplot; the journalistic quality of on-air reporting is at an all-time low. In the rush to be first to get the story out and pump the ratings up, factual reporting has been tossed from the proverbial window in favor of hyperbole, innuendo and just plain old bad, unchecked and unconfirmed intelligence.

Broadcast journalism in the United States works without a net, figuratively speaking while the real reporters slog away in relative obscurity.

The (inter)net may be providing the impetus to report stories both in a premature and incorrect fashion. The three-headed hydra of broadcast applies to not only television and cable reports, but also radio and online news outlets of affiliates.

Thus multiple sources (live broadcast, radio, websites) may be synchronized to simultaneously transmit the same misinformation, all sourced from the same whispered rumors like the children's party game of telephone. What starts whispered in someone's ear at the scene becomes very different when bounced up to the satellite links.

One reportedly dead in Virginia Tech shooting
POSTED: 10:37 a.m. EDT, April 16, 2007

(CNN) -- One person was killed and one person was wounded in a shooting on the Virginia Tech university campus Monday, The Associated Press reported, quoting a state government official.

Students were instructed to stay indoors and away from windows after a gunman reportedly fired shots at a residential dormitory, police at the university said.

"A gunman is loose on campus. Stay in buildings until further notice. Stay away from all windows," read a warning from the university, located in Blacksburg, Virginia

http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/04/16/vtech.shooting/index.html


The first missive is relatively incomplete, but properly attributes the report to an anonymous official. This is a clue that it has been approved by an editor. The attribution is a loophole, but often necessary in the moments of a developing story. Of course the story is on CNN.com, but is in fact a straight Associated Press feed.

The second article provides a good comparison at the skill level of "on the scene" reporting. It immediately declines to quantify figures or speculation in favor of the facts; multiple shootings had occurred and information would be updated as it becomes available. Unfortunately broadcast media chose to ignore this functional style, as fear (of a viewer potentially changing channels) requires that anchor never admit that the information they are presenting is incomplete. Newspapers have no such fear, other than a mistake is there in black and white for either eternity or recycling, whichever comes first.

Multiple shootings confirmed at Virginia Tech

The Roanoke Times
Updated: 10:17 a.m.

Multiple shootings have occurred at Virginia Tech this morning involving multiple victims. The second shooting happened in Norris Hall, the engineering building near Burruss Hall. Police are on the scene and rescue workers have set up a temporary treatment facility. The campus is on lock down. All classes and activities have been cancelled for the day.

Montgomery County public schools are all on lock down. In Blacksburg, no one is being allowed in any school building without approval by the school administrators, said Superintendent Tiffany Anderson.

The university has posted a notice of the incident on its Web site and is urging the university community to be cautious and contact Virginia Tech police at 231-6411 if they notice anything suspicious. No further details were available. The Roanoke Times will update with new information as it become available.


Contrast that with the next update from MSNBC, who were definitely the first in the "Barry Bonds going for the all-time record" numbers-crunching death toll race. There is no disclaimer, MSNBC is smug and confident that they have accurate information. Of course, this is the channel that once erroneously reported that President Bush had declared that troops in Iraq were "expendable".

12:28
MSNBC reports 22 dead.


Now left to their own devices, and ostensibly without the services of the trusty AP editor to fact and source check, CNN jumps headlong into the fray. Can anyone smell the Nielsen boxes overheating?

12:41:21 pm CNN is reporting two separate shootings, two separate shooters, one of whom is dead while the other is in custody.

Of course the promotional value of multiple shooters would be high, especially if one was alive and in custody. But much to CNN's chagrin, that information turned out to be inaccurate. In other words, they reported wrong information.

MSNBC's previous source becomes clear a few minutes later - an anonymous law enforcement source, probably a dispatcher or maybe a scanner transmission, since all the big-time officers were probably still hard at work at the scene. Unfortunately the disclaimer that it was still a developing story was still avoided.


MSNBC - University Advisory:
Shootings close campus; gunman deceased

04/16/2007, Updated 12:40 p.m.

Two shootings on campus today have left 22 confirmed dead, including students.


1:02:28 pm Breaking News from ABCNEWS.com:

AT LEAST 25 PEOPLE HAVE BEEN KILLED IN SHOOTINGS ON VIRGINIA TECH UNIVERSITY CAMPUS. THE NUMBER OF FATALITIES ARE EXPECTED TO RISE.


ABC jumps in to trump the claim of competing organizations and is the first to ratchet up the death toll. The competition for numbers would continue unabated through the afternoon until the official statement was released.

1:16:46 pm CNN reports that the campus police have determined there are 22 dead, and between 17-21 wounded.

Oops, might be time to get a better source, CNN, as ABC is now almost 15 minutes ahead of you and using better sources than a rent-a-cop.


1:37:33 pm By DAVID SCHOETZ, NED POTTER, and the staff of ABC News

Apr. 16, 2007— At least 29 people are dead in what may be the biggest mass killing on a college campus in American history — and the death toll may rise.


Nice job for ABC. Story has bylined authors and a disclaimer, as well as the most accurate total to that point in the coverage.

3:01:45 pm NPR just switched over to special coverage.

AP is reporting 31 + 1(gunman).


Finally, by 6:00 p.m., CNN has it all sorted it out. Of course, the official statement had been made.

CNN, posted at 6:06 pm:

At least 33 people, including a gunman, were killed Monday during shootings in a dorm and a classroom building at Virginia Tech, university officials said.


According to the Tyndall Report, a media tracking blog, 89% of the networks' news features were devoted to the story, with cursory coverage given to the storms in the northeast.

So while the media frenzy continued well into the evening hours, the evidence disappeared. Websites were updated, information was sorted and sourced and the "two gunmen" theory disappeared into the networks' DVD hard drives. Spiffy graphics were developed and somber music affixed to related items of interest.

Million-dollar anchorbabies descended on the scene to fan the interview frenzy and affix their perfectly crowned smiles to the tragedy.

And somewhere nearby in a real newsroom with worn indoor/outdoor carpeting and a squeaky desk chair, a real reporter no doubt sipped some cold instant coffee.

The exotic lattes, it seems, remain the nectar of the sharply-attired media elite who commute to breaking news scenes in executive jets.

Sunday, April 8, 2007

The Sopranos - Starts with a Bang, Ends with ???



by Kitty Killy and Dale Nixon

In honor of the final season of HBO's hit series The Sopranos, Kitty and I have decided to give a special bonus team coverage of the first of the remaining nine episodes.

Wait, that makes this sound like a lame news show.

But as David Chase's hit series reaches a conclusion, the question of relevance remains. The last season was somewhat flat, with successful arcs involving Christopher's relapse, the AJ-Tony storyline, and of course the infamous Johnny Cakes, which launched six months of nicknames.

Predictions:
KK - I think AJ is going to kill his father, but not tonight.
DN - I'm fairly certain Silvio's going to get killed off, and the show is basically going to end with Tony, alone, shaking his head. I also think he'll finally bang Dr. Melfi.

All right, without further ado, PoisonedPens first live review.

DNix: okay. is this going to be a setup episode or come out with a bang?
KK: I'm hoping for an AJ-Tony showdown.
DNix: already?
DNix: I don't think so. AJ isn't a strong enough character yet
KK: A setup.
KK: What about his Puerto Rican gf?
DNix: she's still here
DNix: I saw a pic of her on the site. I think that Adriana's ghost is going to make a bunch of appearances.
KK: Yeah! Can't wait.
DNix: She(Drea De Matteo) likes scummy rocker dudes in real life (Shooter Jennings, etc)
KK: Yay, Chase has writer credit.
DNix: he directed the last episode too
KK: Ok! We saw a gun and it went off! Great start.
DNix: That kid should get stitches (snitches get stitches reference!)
DNix: AJ's look is so North Jersey now
KK: I love Meadow n her legalese.
DNix: Pork Chop, that's great...
KK: Oh man, Phil. Trouble.
DNix: Will Meadow take it all over?
KK: A little less than respectful.
KK: That's a stretch.
KK: Love the machine gun!
DNix: Bobby's such a good character now
KK: Oh man, talk of a wall.
KK: Yup.
KK: So much foreshadowing.
DNix: Tony gets a beej!
DNix: Birthday beej!
KK: B-day bj! Woo!
KK: It's too calm.
DNix: Morbid fucks - great line
KK: Dis beautiful schpot, ha ha.
DNix: Oh jeez, this is dragging...karaoke.
KK: Monopoly? Ugh.
DNix: Middle-aged boredom. ugh is right
KK: They are drizzunk.
KK: Carmela is wasted!
KK: I love when Tony is magnanimous. Whoops, spoke too soon!
KK: Holy shit!
KK: U still there?
DNix: Rule #1 - Don't give drunk house guests automatic weapons
KK: Oh man, hotel on the face.
DNix: Fair and square?
KK: Wish the clock said 420.
KK: Tony is a prince.
DNix: So was Machiavelli
KK: Ya, brilliant too.
KK: Go home n bust AJ's party!
DNix: Shit, I better not look like that at 47!
DNix: The ducks. Always the ducks. Never Chinese, always the ducks
KK: I hope l look like Carm.
KK: Ponies of Bud.
DNix: oh man...poor Bobby.
KK: Bobby's last ride?
DNix: Golf club in the skull?
KK: Carm is so uncomfortable.
DNix: Carm is going to get cancer.
DNix: You watch and see.
KK: Damn, that's dark.
KK: Janice's tattoo cracks me up.
DNix: She shot him in the face! That's not a separate way!
KK: Expired meds, what a scam.
DNix: All meds, what a scam.
KK: Ha ha. Mob md.
DNix: 10 minutes...
KK: Is my provider of choice.
KK: Lots of tension, but still dull. Bobby is gonna pop his cherry.
DNix: Uh oh...dead rocker!
KK: White sneakers, au revoir.
DNix: A bientot
DNix: Bobby is dead man walking.
KK: Bobby, changed.
KK: Nostalgic ep.
DNix: Is there ever redemption on the Sopranos!
KK: No! AJ got away w it again, for now
DNix: You are really on the AJ thing. He deserves to get shot for his fade beard.
KK: I think it's coasting in to a bloody ending.
DNix: Maybe AJ gets killed, Carm gets cancer and Tony is left standing alone, handing the keys to...
DNix: Meadow!