

Filmmaker, life-long smoker, total fucking bad ass, John Ford.

Have you seen Bogdanovich’s Directed by John Ford? This is the best bit in it (if not the best bit in any anything! He calls her Kate for Christsakes!). Add romantic to the resume.


Filmmaker, life-long smoker, total fucking bad ass, John Ford.

Have you seen Bogdanovich’s Directed by John Ford? This is the best bit in it (if not the best bit in any anything! He calls her Kate for Christsakes!). Add romantic to the resume.
While preparing a post on the McCartney/Costello collaboration of the late eighties (which may or may not materialize), I came across this pretty slick video of Costello performing “God’s Comic” solo/acoustic style. According to the guy who posted this on youtube this comes from something called Everything You Wanted To Know About Spike. Seeing this sort of makes up for the lack of alternate versions on this song on the Rhino reissue.
Mower. Superchunk. 1993.

Because I finally got the LP reissue of This is Hardcore in the mail today,–you know, the one that I ordered in February (thanks Plain Recordings, you really dropped the ball on this one)—here‘s the video for Pulp’s This is Hardcore. In my opinion, this is pretty much the best pop video out there. And seeing as how the video embedding is “disabled by request” (thanks a lot Island records, very forward-thinking of you), I’ve substitued the video with a bunch of “outakes” from the LP’s sleeve. These (poorly scanned by me–someone repaired for me the Ed McMullin style staples-in-center one—thanks, dude) pics were included in the booklet that came with the reissue of the CD a few years ago. So, yes, I’ve bought this record (or received it as a gift) at least three times.







The raw rapper, spine snapper, the Greatest of All Time (and life-long smoker), Biggie Smalls.
“We hit every club, every radio station, you know? We get our little eye screws and everything but I just tell them straight up, ‘yo, you know you love me. It’s real. Come on, you don’t got Ready To Die? There you go…'”

All hail Macca’s 1973 James Paul McCartney TV special!
Recorded during February and March 1973 and produced for ITV in the UK and ABC in the States, the James Paul McCartney TV special originally aired in the US on Monday, April 16, 1973. Someone has finally put this on youtube in its entirety and it is actually not that bad. The songs performed range from among Paul’s best (“Maybe I’m Amazed,” “Heart of the Country” and, um, “C-Moon”–yeah, I like that one) to among his absolute worst (“Mary Had a Little Lamb“). Watching it is a good way to kill an hour even if you’re only in it to gasp at the various hairdos and fashion missteps (how could McCartney go from being one of the most fantastically dressed people on the planet circa 1968 to dressing like the fullblown dipshit that he did a few years later?) but there are also some really surreal for prime time television moments the likes of which would never fly today (see the oddball interpretation of “Admiral Halsey”–oh, and, dare I say it, Linda looks kind of hot in the opening of that one too).
More with-it critics were predictably unimpressed with Melody Maker saying “McCartney has always had an ear and an eye for full-blown romanticism, and nothing wrong with that, but here he too often lets it get out and hand and it becomes overblown and silly.” When asked to comment, Lennon was surprisingly kind, “I liked parts of Paul’s TV special, especially the intro. The bit filmed in Liverpool made me squirm a bit. But Paul’s a pro. He always has been.”
I think that this is an outtake from the show. Paul singing “Heart of the Country.”


Talking Heads.
This was some hot stuff just over a decade ago: a one-off Daft Punk side project single that went by the ultracamp name Stardust. This track was a hit, particularly in the UK where it went to number two in the charts. (Yes, kids, this kind of goofball shit was at one time taken seriously.) To my knowledge, Stardust went out on top and thankfully didn’t throw together a quicky LP to capitalize on their single song success.
nine eight shit
Primal Scream. Star.
nine seven shit.

This 1943 Warner Brothers’ Merrie Melodies animated short is entitled Coal Black and De Sebben Dwarfs. It is one of the so-called “censored eleven,” cartoons that were taken out of circulation by their then-owner Universal in 1968 due to their questionable subject matter. It is pretty plain as to why this one would be suppressed–its vile depiction of grotesque black stereotypes (and, this being wartime, at least one mention of “japs”). What surprised me is the Citizen Kane reference.
Note: I prepared this post a few days ago with a youtube video that claimed to be taken from a 16mm print with very good image and sound but that has been removed. (I guess Warner Brothers only want people to see this if it is a mess of a VHS rip.) I settled on an inferior video. If this one is removed you’ll have to try your luck here.