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Defense Aide's Notes Found at Dupont Circle Coffee Shop
The Center for American Progress has posted notes from what appears to be a pre-talk show brief for Secretary Rumsfeld.
The Washington Post reported on it as well.
John Wojnowski Still Protesting
I ran into John Wojnowski the other day at the corner of 20th and P. John had led a long battle against the Catholic Church for molesting penitents. He protests in front of the Vatican Embassy on Mass. Ave. almost every day. In 2002, the Washington Post profiled him:
[...]
"Almost every afternoon for four years, John Wojnowski has stood in front of the Vatican's embassy on Massachusetts Avenue NW, directly across from the vice president's mansion, holding signs decrying sex abuse in the Catholic Church.
"Pedophilia: Catholic Clergy's Sordid 'Professional Secret,' " reads the latest version, which he shakes back and forth to catch a driver's fleeting attention, then flips over to deliver a second punch: "Gross and So True."
"It has been a painfully public protest by a painfully shy man. The cold, the rain and the sun, being cursed, threatened and repeatedly robbed of his signs -- the lonely battle has tired Wojnowski, but in a way it has also sustained him. Now, as a sex abuse scandal spreads from diocese to diocese and shakes the church around the world, he senses vindication coming.
"It feels good," he said in Polish-accented English.
"Far from being homeless or deranged, Wojnowski is a 58-year-old retired ironworker, living on an $1,100-a-month pension, who commutes by bus and Metro from his house in Bladensburg, in Prince George's County, to his regular spot on the sidewalk just beyond the legal boundary of the Vatican embassy, formally known as the Papal Nunciature.
"The reason for his mysterious and relentless vigil: When he was 14 or 15, he said, he was molested by a priest in Italy, and the experience plunged him into years of withdrawal and depression.
He was handing out this flyer (pdf version):
Sorry I haven't blogged...
I've been busy! New publications have been finished and are forthcoming. I've also built a new computer. It's an Athlon 64 in a ASUS k8 mainboard. It screams.
Voting Age Population Estimates
have been released by the Department of Commerce. The numbers are in thousands. Now, how many of these people are registered...and how many actually vote?
United States........................................... 217,766
Alabama................................................. 3,393
Alaska.................................................. 460
Arizona................................................. 4,061
Arkansas................................................ 2,044
California.............................................. 26,064
Colorado................................................ 3,398
Connecticut............................................. 2,648
Delaware................................................ 619
District of Columbia.................................... 455
Florida................................................. 13,095
Georgia................................................. 6,388
Hawaii.................................................. 960
Idaho................................................... 994
Illinois................................................ 9,423
Indiana................................................. 4,592
Iowa.................................................... 2,251
Kansas.................................................. 2,028
Kentucky................................................ 3,124
Louisiana............................................... 3,319
Maine................................................... 1,019
Maryland................................................ 4,131
Massachusetts........................................... 4,946
Michigan................................................ 7,541
Minnesota............................................... 3,811
Mississippi............................................. 2,120
Missouri................................................ 4,297
Montana................................................. 702
Nebraska................................................ 1,298
Nevada.................................................. 1,660
New Hampshire........................................... 981
New Jersey.............................................. 6,507
New Mexico.............................................. 1,373
New York................................................ 14,657
North Carolina.......................................... 6,320
North Dakota............................................ 487
Ohio.................................................... 8,621
Oklahoma................................................ 2,633
Oregon.................................................. 2,710
Pennsylvania............................................ 9,535
Rhode Island............................................ 832
South Carolina.......................................... 3,124
South Dakota............................................ 569
Tennessee............................................... 4,447
Texas................................................... 15,878
Utah.................................................... 1,609
Vermont................................................. 482
Virginia................................................ 5,588
Washington.............................................. 4,635
West Virginia........................................... 1,419
Wisconsin............................................... 4,139
Wyoming................................................. 380
Sopranos Creator Interviewed in the Times
It's worth reading.
February 29, 2004
The Real Boss of 'The Sopranos'
By VIRGINIA HEFFERNAN
Next Sunday, after a hiatus of 15 months, "The Sopranos" returns to
HBO for its fifth season led, as ever, by David Chase, the show's
creator and executive producer. Mr. Chase recently spoke with
Virginia Heffernan about the show's legacy, the pitfalls of therapy
and the horror of network television.
HEFFERNAN: How is "The Sopranos" different from the rest of
television?
CHASE: The function of an hour drama is to reassure the American
people that it's O.K. to go out and buy stuff. It's all about
flattering the audience, making them feel as if all the authority
figures have our best interests at heart. Doctors, lawyers,
psychiatrists: sure, they have their little foibles, some of them
are grouchy, but by God, they care.
[...]
HEFFERNAN: HBO has allowed you a lot of liberties with this show,
but it seems like the biggest one would be getting to produce
60-minute hours instead of the 42-minute hour of network dramas.
CHASE: We don't have to deliver 60 minutes. Our shows usually run 52
minutes to an hour. I can tell you from working in networks for a
long time: to have to cut something to 42 minutes for an hour show
is absurd. It's despicable. We're sold something that's supposed to
be an hour, and it's 18 minutes of commercials. It's less than a
therapy hour. I'm amazed that we Americans put up with this.
HEFFERNAN: Do you think TV's bad for us? Worse than, say, movies?
CHASE: Television is at the base of a lot of our problems. It
trivializes everything. So there's no more mystery, we've seen it
all 50,000 times. And in order to make the boring interesting,
everything is hyped. I think, for example, terrorism is a television
question: what those images do on TV how they're played and played
and played until they have no meaning whatsoever. And the next one
has to be even bigger. There is something about a motion picture. I
think Bertolucci said a movie is like a cathedral. The faces are 40
feet high. It's a more magical experience. In television you're
sitting there in your own home, on your crummy couch, and it takes
away there's something missing.
HEFFERNAN: But there's also something so consoling about it. It's
close to family; it's at home.
CHASE: Yeah, but family doesn't really watch it together. There was
a four-month period in 1956 where families watched it together. It
seems to be very divisive, and I think it's very isolating,
actually.
HEFFERNAN: Do you have any moral qualms about working in TV, then?
CHASE: Yes, I do. I never wanted to work in television. I did it for
the money. I've always wanted to be working in movies and I never
could make that jump.
HEFFERNAN: You could now. Will you take "The Sopranos" to the big
screen?
CHASE: I don't know about "The Sopranos" movie. "The Sopranos" has
been the best creative experience of my life. None of us who work on
the show ever expected to last beyond a season, if that. The whole
thing came about because I thought I would be able to take HBO's
money and make a pilot, which would catapult me into the very
stratosphere of feature-film directing. But it didn't work out that
way. It's been you know, I'm really lucky. People like the show,
and I've got a great group of actors, a great group of directors.
But I don't want to do any more TV. I'm tired of television. I'm
tired of the form. I've always wanted to go into movies.
HEFFERNAN: But before you do how's the show going to end?
CHASE: We're going to tell you that everything's O.K. And that you
should go out and buy stuff.
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